Waved antemedial and postmedial lines approach each other at the lower angle of the cell.
The area between them is slightly tinged with bluish grey and has a waved dark line edged with white on each side of the discocellulars.
The pupa is stout; in males, it is glossy black, with numerous short, small tufts of hair.
Eggs are pillbox-shaped and pale whitish brown, with a darker ring encircling a depressed top.
The name Orgyia is because the larvae have been recorded on a wide range of species, including Buchanania, Mangifera,[5] Durio, Ochroma, Casuarina, Terminalia, Shorea, Hevea, Ricinus, Pelargonium, Cinnamomum, Acacia, Albizia, Caesalpinia, Cajanus, Cassia, Dalbergia, Erythrina, Pithecellobium, Pterocarpus, Sesbania, Xylia, Lagerstroemia, Eucalyptus, Tristania, Zizyphus, Malus, Coffea, Citrus, Santalum, Dimocarpus, Litchi, Nephelium, Theobroma, Camellia, Grewia, and Tectona.