Many people have seen a little ladybug split open its hard shiny spotted shells — a hard case called an elytra — to reveal its true wings before it flies away. The whole event is somewhat surprising because the round curved case doesn’t seem like it could hold such wings. Well, in slow motion, the act is even more wonderful to watch.

Cameraman Rainer Bergomaz recorded exactly that slow-motion takeoff at 3000 frames per second in this video posted by pcoimaging on Youtube (H/T Rebecca O’Connell for Mental Floss). The edited video sequence actually shows 250 frames per second before and after the main event and slows to 25 frames per second as each ladybug unfurls its wings.

For a Boston University course blog, Dereck Fagundes writes about the ladybug’s fascinating anatomy, first describing that the elytra are actually a set of modified forewings that play no role in flight. He write: