Kenneth Yap Photography's profile

Detail of Nature Magnified - with captions

Detail of Nature Magnified - with captions

Single images below
 1. Photo of a huntsman spider: Resting on a piece of bark that I peeled back just a little at Rofe Park, which is a place of nature magic, and I am very pleased with this photo that I took.
2.  Photo of a butterfly that was also taken at Rofe Park! I was walking down the footpath to the nature reserve that adjoins Rofe Park when I saw this butterfly. I immediately noticed these decadently beautifully rich hues of orange, and then these piercing black eyes on its wings, and I had to take its photo, and thankfully, this butterfly was an amazingly patient and perfect supermodel!
3.  Here is a photo of a most strange thing that I found one day at Rofe Park which are some kind of multiple eggs that are of a species that I have no idea about!

If anyone from Australia or any other country that has this species in their country knows what this is, please feel free to tell me?

I took this close up and couldn’t be more stoked that I got a good photo of something that made my day so incredibly special, that I may chance upon such a thing on a day when I thought I would just find the usual, and then the occasional amazing thing, but never something so different!
4. Here is a photo taken at Rofe Park of a rubbish spider, it is called a rubbish spider because it makes something in its web that looks like rubbish to blend in as something that looks like rubbish itself, hence the name.

I used a small aperture to take this photo, different to conventional approaches which is with a wide aperture, which awesomely enough created bokeh around the spider!

With that amazingly green background and the tree at the left of the frame, I just really love how things came together for this photo. I walked 900 metres into the nature reserve to find a tree that had 25 of them around the tree, and this is the one that was most photogenic to me with the way that the whole scene came together with the spider, in complementing it and contrasting it and adding to the scene masterfully.
5. And here is a photo of probably the most unique thing that I have ever seen at Rofe Park! As I approached a most healthy tree, a tree I hadn't inspected in a very long time, tall grass standing guard at every inch around the tree and it’s "luscious emerald green" fortress surrounds, I noticed something glisteningly out of the ordinary (peculiar to what was expected aka remarkably much of difference), this was the most fantastic find of mine to date at Rofe Park, and something I never thought my eyes would bare witness!

I began to approach the tree with a slow but steadfast pace, just being in awe with every micro inch I crept, because of what I was beholding, and at first, as I neared, at first glance, I thought it must be a cocoon, but upon closer inspection, I realized this cocoon had legs near the top of its head and above its head, "what a marvel of an artwork on the canvas of nature" I exclaimed in ecstatic overjoy and elation and euphoria! To my bemusement, I seemed way overexcited than I'd ever imagined I'd be in such moments of befuddlement, but I readily and most swiftly took out my camera and started taking many frames with old faithful thy camera!
6. Here is a photo I took of a leech taken at Rofe Park.

This leech was about to climb onto my shoe and suck my blood, but before it could, I stepped away and it just found itself suspended in metaphorically speaking, mid air, and it held itself in this position for a good 2 minutes, and I just really loved how the position it was in made it look like an upside down letter T, with the branch it was standing on being the top of the upside down letter T!

This is a typical scene of a leech at Rofe Park, and there are hundreds and hundreds of them; even thousands of them on a rainy day! I got about eleven of them all over me on one occasion when photographing other creatures, so this is a fun thing, because this is a memorable encounter with a leech, but this is just one among thousands living in the super huge nature reserve.
7.  Another photo taken at Rofe Park of an assassin bug, they are amazing creatures which will pierce their prey with their rostrums (long thing in front of its face which it uses to jab prey and suck them dry with). I noticed that she was just happily resting on this leaf, and I thought that she just looked/looks so pretty and so extravagantly marvellous in design, and so, inevitably so, I took her photo!
8.  And here is my lucky last photo of the same assassin bug, I thought this was the most aesthetically pleasing photo in terms of how the background, the pink petal, the vine behind the assassin bug and the way the scene just all came together, just so wonderfully juxtaposed! I think they just marvellously and exquisitely complement the assassin bug. 
9.  Here is a full picture shot of a centipede which is a stone centipede photographed in the pot of my cactus plant, which was happily munching away at the hapless victim; a diseased black house spider.
10.  Here is the last photo of that same centipede.

I just loved how it was tearing into its prey, and of the sparkling light around it, and wanted to highlight that with a super close up. Shortly after, it retreated back into its hole, and I love it for being most cooperative for having its portrait taken!
Just in case anyone was wondering why I published a project (this project) with the same photos you can see in the previous one, the one I did with Sylvie and Helena in that collaboration project of insects and spiders, it is because I didn't have captions with the photos, and I wanted to have one where there were captions were with the photos. =)
Detail of Nature Magnified - with captions
Published: