40 Unique Personalities Of Stray Cats As Captured By This Japanese Photographer (New Pics)
Japanese Masayuki Oki is not your usual street photographer. Instead of photographing urban landscapes, street style, or architecture, his lens targets the cute little wanderers of Tokyo. Armed with a Canon EOS-1D X, Masayuki follows the footsteps of stray cats in a mission to document all the street felines of the world.
Masayuki’s photography has attracted a solid fanbase with 199k followers on his Instagram account. Every day, he shares a snap of streetwise meowsers goofing around, chilling out, sometimes fighting, other times embracing each other in what seems to be a whole new and exciting world.
So get ready for the heart-melting stray cat collection from the land of the rising sun, which will fill your heart with the warmth we all need these days. And after you’re done, be sure to check out more of Masayuki Oki’s pictures in our previous post right here.
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"Fought a flat brown creature invading my territory. Won the fight."
This is funny. We have tons of trees and the last month the leaves have been falling. I sit under one big tree and read often. The 4 cats always hang out near me and the leaves jyst float around us. IF a leaf lands near the cat he will attack the leaf like it's a mouse.
This reminds me of Salem from the 90s sitcom Sabrina, the Teenage Witch. I think Salem was a mechanical cat back then.
I'm trying to find a rain shelter for stray cats I can put in my side yard :< anyone got ideas
To find out more about the photographer behind Tokyo’s stray cat photographs, Bored Panda reached out to Masayuki Oki. Masayuki, who originally comes from Kobe, now resides in Tokyo, where he spends days (and sometimes, nights) looking for streetwise felines to photograph.It all started in 2013 when Masayuki was having a break from his job.
“I was taking a break in the park near my office. I got fascinated by one cat there, and I started photographing all the felines in that park. Then, I decided to post my pictures on Instagram and 7 years later, I still love doing this.”
Masayuki has been traveling everywhere he could, from Tokyo to Houghton in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Istanbul to take pictures of stray cats. Corona has slowed down his traveling, but he is excited to resume his mission of photographing street cats around the globe as soon as the pandemic is over.
Today, Masayuki has already made himself a name after publishing 10 commercial photo books, appearing on various Japanese magazines and television. “I'm not very good at photos other than cats,” he joked. “I also think that cats are simply very photogenic,” Masayuki added.
“Until I held the camera, I had the stereotype that cats were cool, sleeping all day long, and didn't care about their surroundings.” However, that all changed when Masayuki started taking pictures of them.
“I realized these cats had complex emotions, expressions, and gestures. I also discovered that cats have complex relationships just like humans, and that each cat has their own identity.”
in Japan everything is so clean, even the stray cats! It's just amazing...
Does anybody know how I can save this to my computer? this is too wholesome!
I wonder if they have a TNR program in Japan? If they don't, they really need one.
Striking difference between the imagination of cats' personality displayed in those kitschy "Hello Kitties" and the reality.
The juxtaposition of the sappy Hello Kitty in the background and the cat fight in the foreground is something else.
This moment when you understand and appreciate the personality of every cat you’re looking at is something special for the stray cat photographer. “My desire to capture them on camera with all these crazy facial expressions and emotions is the driving force of my photographs.”
Masayuki also said he’s very happy to have people from all over the world praising his pictures in the comments on his Instagram account. “I want to make all the cat lovers of this world happy with my photos,” he concluded.
Cats rule, dogs drool. Foxes and dogs are related, therefore cats still rule and foxes drool.
The cats look as if they are bowing to one another. They are Japanese, alright.
I was thinking the same! Which are the Jets and which are the Sharks?
Load More Replies...This is a foreign business cat taking a relaxing vacation in Japan...
Something about a chair rung and a soft warm back with the smell of fish
When you're just done eating but you already hungry again and you start questioning your life choices
Maybe he's full of it, has lived all his life on sushi, is a sushi now.
Load More Replies...Anyone notice how his sleeping position is similar to the man in the background?
mmmmmmmmmmmmaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ik lus nog wel. meer.....
Yup, a nope rope, and the cat too looks surprised
Load More Replies...OH NO HELP THE POOR KITTY WITTY PLEASE IM CRYING AT DIS PLEASE SAVE HIM!!!
It sucks how cats that are so beautiful and full and deserving get dumped like trash or born in a hard environment
another yoga one wow there should be things in yoga that cats do
I think their fighting... so you two are probably more romantic.
Load More Replies...*stereotypical iIalian chef voice "...and theeen you add a bit of snake"
Lord please bless this crop and may we all receive a plentiful catnip harvest. Amen.
hhihihihihhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
even kijken of dit huis nog bezet is........ wel een hele rare doos...........
Even stray cats look happier in Japan than other countries. There's just something amicable about Japan.
Does anyone know why so many Japanese street cats have partially cut of tails? I lived there for 2 years and never understood this.
All these cats look well-fed, happy, and extremely friendly towards each other, like a well-behaved contented community. Really striking. The thing about their tails: many cats in Japan have either no tail or just a stump. Nothing to do with the Manx cat too. It's genetic to Japanese cats. There is a kind of tail, sort of curling on itself and slightly bushy, which is very sought after: it's called "chrysanthemum tail".
Nope, didn't say anything asinine or anything :-) Was just checking to see if my account was working again... apparently, it is! My BP was screwed up for the past month or so. Very distressing!
Load More Replies...I know some countries catch feral cats to neuter or spay then release them after marking them by clipping the ear tips?? Maybe they clip the tails in Japan? Though that seems to be a bit of an extreme way, perhaps its just their genetics? There are stubby tailed cat breeds.
I was wondering too, since the tails don't exactly look docked so maybe it's just a genetic mutation?
Load More Replies...Even stray cats look happier in Japan than other countries. There's just something amicable about Japan.
Does anyone know why so many Japanese street cats have partially cut of tails? I lived there for 2 years and never understood this.
All these cats look well-fed, happy, and extremely friendly towards each other, like a well-behaved contented community. Really striking. The thing about their tails: many cats in Japan have either no tail or just a stump. Nothing to do with the Manx cat too. It's genetic to Japanese cats. There is a kind of tail, sort of curling on itself and slightly bushy, which is very sought after: it's called "chrysanthemum tail".
Nope, didn't say anything asinine or anything :-) Was just checking to see if my account was working again... apparently, it is! My BP was screwed up for the past month or so. Very distressing!
Load More Replies...I know some countries catch feral cats to neuter or spay then release them after marking them by clipping the ear tips?? Maybe they clip the tails in Japan? Though that seems to be a bit of an extreme way, perhaps its just their genetics? There are stubby tailed cat breeds.
I was wondering too, since the tails don't exactly look docked so maybe it's just a genetic mutation?
Load More Replies...
