Photographer Su Hendeles' has gone back to the dark room to produce the works in her Daddy Fly exhibition at Gallery 85 in Glasgow St.
Images of dead house flies, blowflies and the odd mosquito have been made strangely beautiful when processed as ambrotypes.
Ambrotypes, says Hendeles, are created using the wet collodion process which was invented by Frederick Scott Archer in 1851.
"Collodion, a heady cocktail of nitrocellulose, ether and alcohol laced with iodide and bromide, is poured on to a glass plate which is then immersed in a solution of silver nitrate to make it light sensitive.
"The still wet plate is then exposed and quickly developed in Bunnings moss killer before it has a chance to dry out."