Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 24 Jan 2011 at 12:25:29 (UTC)
Original - The
Italian wall lizard or Ruin lizard (Podarcis sicula) is a species of lizard native to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, France, Italy, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovenia, and Switzerland, but has also been introduced to Spain, Turkey, and the United States. This male lizard was photographed in Tuscany.Edit 1 - Crop
Reason
Very good angle on the whole body of an attractive lizard, tail intact. Resolution is high, lighting is nice, and it's an FP on de.wiki.
I like the original more, but will officially prefer edit 1 because it's more likely to succeed at staying in the article (particularly infobox).
Maedin\talk13:19, 21 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Thanks for supporting either. If the objective was to sacrifice detail to illustrate diminutive scale, our Ant article would have pictures
like this. Wisely, they used a serious closeup of an ant for the introductory photo in the lede of the article.
Greg L (
talk)
01:05, 22 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 24 Jan 2011 at 12:25:29 (UTC)
Original - The
Italian wall lizard or Ruin lizard (Podarcis sicula) is a species of lizard native to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, France, Italy, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovenia, and Switzerland, but has also been introduced to Spain, Turkey, and the United States. This male lizard was photographed in Tuscany.Edit 1 - Crop
Reason
Very good angle on the whole body of an attractive lizard, tail intact. Resolution is high, lighting is nice, and it's an FP on de.wiki.
I like the original more, but will officially prefer edit 1 because it's more likely to succeed at staying in the article (particularly infobox).
Maedin\talk13:19, 21 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Thanks for supporting either. If the objective was to sacrifice detail to illustrate diminutive scale, our Ant article would have pictures
like this. Wisely, they used a serious closeup of an ant for the introductory photo in the lede of the article.
Greg L (
talk)
01:05, 22 January 2011 (UTC)reply