Moths: Brown Oak Tortrix
The brown oak tortrix (Archips xylosteana), gevlamde bladroller in Dutch, has a wingspan of about 20mm (0.8") and is widespread in most of Europe and Asia. They fly from June to August in one generation.
These moths rest during the day in the foliage of trees and shrubs; their activity begins at dusk. The caterpillars mostly feed on oak trees, but are also found on fruit trees like apple and pear.
Widespread as they may be, I hardly ever see one. The one photo I have of this species may explain why:

Olympus XZ-1, 112mm, ISO200, f5.6, 1/50s
Here's another photo of a moth (species unknown) that is quite good at camouflage:

Olympus XZ-1, 112mm, ISO100, f8, 1/125s
Even when you go looking for these, you need a bit of luck to find them, or much patience.
Thanks for watching!
Previous in series: Mint Moth.
YES. Such wondrous camouflage. Was a little harder for me to see the one in the oak tree as I was looking on the leaves. 😊
World of Photography Beta V1.0
>Learn more here<
You have earned 6.30 XP for sharing your photo!
Daily photos: 1/2
Daily comments: 0/5
Multiplier: 1.26
Server time: 11:29:35
Total XP: 456.82/800.00
Total Photos: 64
Total comments: 37
Total contest wins: 1
Follow: @photocontests
Join the Discord channel: click!
Play and win SBD: @fairlotto
Daily Steem Statistics: @dailysteemreport
Learn how to program Steem-Python applications: @steempytutorials
Developed and sponsored by: @juliank
This is amazing @ocrdu thank you for share with us.
@ocrdu, sangat indah gambarnya
Adapting to trees, good postings,