A Blood-vein moth (Timandra comae) with damaged wings rests on a piece of pine furniture.
From Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timandra_comae):
The Blood-vein, (Timandra comae) is a moth of the family Geometridae. It has a scattered distribution in Western and Central Europe north of the Alps. In the British Isles the distribution is patchy outside southern England and Wales. In far eastern Europe – east of a line running roughly from Finland through Estonia –, it is replaced by its sister species Timandra griseata. The species were split in 1931, only to be subsequently re-merged by most authors. But since 1994, new research has come out in favor of treating them as distinct species.
The wings are cream-coloured with bold red or purple fascia forming a diagonal stripe across forewings and hindwings. All wings are fringed with the same colour. The tornus of the hindwing is sharply angled giving a distinctive shape. The wingspan is 30–35 mm. Two broods are produced each year with the adults flying in May and June and again in August and September. It flies at night and is attracted to light.
-0.2 exposure compensation in ACR
10 recovery in ACR
straightened in ACR
rotated to landscape orientation in ACR
Piece of thread removed in ACR