Meet Kimi
This is my entry for #ColorChallenge initiated by
, and inspired by 
This is our first little fluff ball, named Princess Kimberly Jane, by you know who, name starts with princess too.
She is about four years old, maybe five, I honestly don't keep track of people's birthday days let alone those of cats. This little bugger is on her last seven lives, fell out of our fifth story window when she was little and lost two lives,. She get's pampered more than the Queen of England does, and I've come to the realization that she now probably believes herself to be some sort of cat royalty.
I was playing around with the slow-mo function on my phone, when I noticed how yellow her eyes looked in the late afternoon sun, so that's how we got here.
Then went reading about what we know of the cat eye, and it's pretty insane how well these things cat see. They also explain that cat's aren't possessed when their eyes look all weird and evil, that just a natural way their eyes reflect light to make them the most perfect hunters. Well not our cats, especially not this one, many years of luxury, has turned her into quiet the madam.
"Cats have a visual field of view of 200° compared with 180° in humans, but a binocular field (overlap in the images from each eye) narrower than that of humans. As with most predators, their eyes face forward, affording depth perception at the expense of field of view. Field of view is largely dependent upon the placement of the eyes, but may also be related to the eye's construction. Instead of the fovea, which gives humans sharp central vision, cats have a central band known as the visual streak. Cats can see some colors, and can tell the difference between red, blue and yellow lights, as well as between red and green lights. Cats are able to distinguish between blues and violets better than between colors near the red end of the spectrum." - Wikipedia