Kees' photos with the keyword: lizard

One more lizard

29 Jul 2007 2 4 420
Pleasantly surprised, this Saturday afternoon, by yet another lizard. Sorry, but Bavarian wildlife seems to be limited to lizards, dachshunds, and elephants. A fat one, this time. She must be pregnant. Or he must have eaten too much chocolate.

Lizard lazing on a pear tree

Bavarian Wildlife, Part Two

26 Jun 2007 342
For the first time, this year, our garden seemed to move when we entered it: sunbathing lizards everywhere sought a safe hiding place under stones and bushes. Only one remained, apparently wanting to show off his beauty. I love my camera, a Sony DSC-R1, but it isn’t well equipped for this kind of thing. With the right camera/lens, or in a zoo, it won’t be too hard to shoot more spectacular pictures. Considering the circumstances, however, I’m quite happy with our little photo session... A close-up of his face. Bavarian Wildlife, Part One and Part Three.

Bavarian Wildlife, Part Three

26 Jun 2007 285
The RAW files created by my camera are 20.1Mb; consequently, 25 shots of a half-hidden domestic lizard make well over 500Mb. I can’t tell you how grateful I am that the majority was rubbish and could be trashed. (Sony DSC-R1; 1/160s, f4.8/71.5mm, ISO 800, RAW)

Lizard (detail)

26 Jun 2007 433
What is a macro shot? Is it a picture taken with a macro lens, projecting a 1:1 size image on a film? Or must it just present a bigger-than-life reality, and enlarge it in such a way that you discover details and a beauty not to be seen with the naked eye? If you adhere to the former definition, this is no macro shot: it’s a detail of this picture. I strongly doubt, however, if that formalistic approach still holds in the age of digital photography: there used to be macro shots before “macro lenses” even existed, and there will be without them.

Hi bro’!

26 Jun 2007 342
Arguably, I’ve been a lizard in a former life. I’ve no doubt that this is a good lizard who recognizes a distant relative. Taken in our garden (Sony DSC-R1; 1/160s, f4.8/71.5mm, ISO 400, RAW). View this for the same lizard in another pose.