We investigated the effect of additional continuous functional coatings, which changed the hydrophilic–hydrophobic properties of the surface without heavily influencing the surface topography at the nanoscale, on the antiadhesive properties of bioinspired laser-induced periodic nanostructures. These nanostructures mimic the antiadhesive structures on the silk-combing area on the legs of cribellate spiders, the calamistrum. The thin films were deposited by matrix-assisted laser deposition and characterized by infrared spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, water contact angle measurements, and adhesion tests using capture threads from the cribellate spider webs. In all cases, the nanoripples were preserved and these structured surfaces showed lower adhesion forces compared to flat controls, although not significant. However, this effect was totally overwhelmed by the difference between the adhesion forces on surfaces with different chemical compositions. The largest adhesion forces were observed on hydrophilic surfaces and the lowest ones on hydrophobic surfaces. The fact that the antiadhesion between nanofibers and the nano-structured areas depends strongly on the chemical composition of the surface can be explained by the specific adhesion between individual chemical groups due to frequency dependencies in the theory of van der Waals forces. However, explaining these adhesion properties just by the categories “hydrophilic” or “hydrophobic” is oversimplified.