Welcome all to the Sunday Cat!, a weekly gathering of image makers on a subject of mutual interest, our feline friends. The Sunday Cat! has appeared each Sunday, except for a brief interruption in September, 2016, since Anton AK started the thread at DPReview on 23 September 2007. Successive thread managers have been John King, Warriormouse, Robert J, Coldamus, Robert J again (with an assist by StanTsui) and since September 2016, former lurker, me. With the announced shuttering of DPReview (which did not happen), the last Sunday Cat! there was hosted on 2 April 2023. After taking a leap of faith, the Sunday Cat! landed here at its new home on 9 April 2023.
Aristocratic Kitty of the Week!
KitKat looking elegant in her natural light portrait. :)
~~Image by @WhyNot
As said by Warriormouse, "Photos can be more than just art, they can be memories, so come share your picture and stories of your feline companions with us."
“Official” posting time is every Sunday at 0000 UTC. Because this is Saturday afternoon for me, posting time may vary to accommodate my schedule. I'll try to post a message if I know I will be very late. Anyone anxious to start the new week is free to do so. But if you do, please PM me so I don’t accidentally double post.
Come one, come all! All cats, all cameras welcome. Images from any time, any place. Let the Sunday Cat! be a refuge where nice comments abound and only constructive criticism is given when it's requested.
The Sunday Cat! is now open for business. :D
Last week's purrs, #854 / DPRv #47
Thread Manager's Corner:
It was a quiet week for the Sunday Cat! but KitKat's lovely portrait is still a stand out! :) I've been very much caught up in trying to manage Palmer's wellness. Several meds with differing requirements to schedule and just trying to get him to eat enough to sustain himself. Some days it looks we'll have him for a few more months, and on others it looks like time is getting short. In between, not much photography for my part. I look forward to what others can share here.
~~~ Kim
Though small in size, the imprint they make on our lives is huge.