A couple of weeks ago I participated in a Super Secret Stealth Shoot on the Sly. The mission: retrieve keys, wait for humans to leave for work, enter condo, photograph the two Labradoodles inside, leave before dogwalker comes. I had major help from the sister of one of the owners, who booked the shoot. The photos are going to be a surprise engagement present for her brother and soon to be sister-in-law.

      Meet doodle #1: Clyde

      Doodles

      Clyde is 2 years old and is sparkling white. His nose is brick-colored. His fur smells like fabric softener.

      Meet doodle #2: Chloe

      Chloe

      Chloe is but a puppy at 6 months old. She is more apricot in color than Clyde and has much less curl.  She’s got this impossibly buttony black button nose that reminds me of some Pixar animated character.

      Clyde and Chloe had a jolly time hanging out on the bed. Hopefully owners didn’t come home and wonder why the sheets were a) so rumpled and b) smeared with American cheese.

      To get these shots, I wedged myself between the bed and the wall, knees bent – there was maybe only 2 feet of space – and set my 17-55mm lens all the way to WIDE. I scooched as far back as I could so that I was pretty much crumpled against the wall like a stuffed doll that had been unceremoniously tossed from the bed. And I did it all for the light. It was an overcast day, and what meager light we were getting was coming in from the window directly above me.

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      The dogs’ human aunt E.  joined me in this tiny space, and together we sat squished side-by-side, me shooting away while E. smeared Kraft American cheese on their noses, dangled more cheese above the camera, and baby-talked right into my ear. The dogs clamored to get closer. I strained to back up more as my camera strained to focus on such close, quivering subjects. E. continued enticing them with cheese and cooing next to my ear. The dogs inched even closer. I could no longer hold still because my neck started to kill and I was laughing so hard.  I was imagining one of the owners unexpectedly coming home, walking into the bedroom, and seeing two dogs hovering over the edge of the bed as two girls huddled together on the floor, one with a handful of cheese and the other with a giant camera.

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      Say CHEESE PLEASE!

      I LOVED how involved E. was during the shoot. It’s always great when I get assistance from owners. After all, they know what makes their dogs tick more than I do! Not only does it make my job easier, it makes it that much more fun. I think back to my very first shoots when I didn’t want or ask for assistance, mostly because I was really self-conscious, nervous, didn’t know what I was doing, or all of the above. My God I was SO self-conscious. I remember my first shoot – and it was for a good friend’s dog, pro bono, as practice – thinking, Am I *seriously* trying to photograph this dog PROFESSIONALLY? What does that even mean? Hi I look and feel stupid. I’d just randomly fire away and hope for the best.

      Truth is I do still “randomly” fire away to get the absolute candid shots. But it’s definitely a strategic kind of random, if that makes any sense. I’m doing a lot of crouching and moving around and recomposing, and am always aware of what’s going on around me – light, backgrounds, colors, textures, etc. I still have lots to learn, but I feel I am seriously getting so much better at this. There’s still that breathless flutter of nerves before each shoot, because I want everything to go well, naturally. But I am no longer self-conscious. Can’t tell you how liberating that feels. And I do feel I know what I’m doing, or at the very least I have a battle plan for each shoot (whether or not it goes accordingly is not always the case, but that’s okay!). As I do more, I am finding that I’ve been balancing the true candids with a lot more staged shots in order to get more interesting compositions, or ones that I’m envisioning in my head pre-shoot.

      Anyway, back to our featured pooches!

      Clyde and Chloe are BFFs.

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      I love the below image. A staged shot turned candid.  Chloe is making sure that Clyde’s still there.

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      Now for some pure candids. Dogs looks so vicious when they’re playing!

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      Chloe: IMAGONNAEATCHOO!
      Clyde: *sob*

      After an hour or so hanging out at the house, we headed outside to pick up a third doodle who was waiting patiently to join the party.

      Meet doodle #3: Moose (center)

      Doodles

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      Moose is E.’s own dog and blood brother of Clyde. He is an apricot. They make quite the dashing duo.

      We made a stop at the dog playground, where the exuberant Chloe tested every toy there and was gone with the wind.

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      I particularly loved this shoot because of the location as well – the South End. My neighborhood! Chloe and Clyde’s home was only 2 streets down from mine. It took a total of 60 seconds for me to walk there. Yay! And I hope you will agree, we live in quite a pretty neighbood, filled with brick and wrought iron, cobblestone pathways and hidden alleyways. It is so very urban, so very Bostonian.

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      HOWEVER, if you’re going to shoot in the city, make sure you don’t schedule the session on trash pick-up day, the way I did. Oops. I strategically framed shots along the street so you wouldn’t see the bags of trash lining the curb.

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      Clyde and Chloe stepped aside briefly so we could get some solo portraits of Moose.

      Moose Doodles

      When humans are caught blinking on camera, I give those photos the heave-ho. But when puppies are caught blinking, I give those photos a 5-star rating. Why is that?

      And it’s a wrap!

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      I’d like to think they’re all congratulating each other for a shoot well done.

      We end with what’s becoming a favorite shot of mine: dog against red-orange door.

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      I so enjoyed this shoot – great dogs, great human assistance, great location (I want to do more urban shoots please. Beacon Hill and Back Bay-ers, call me!). I hope Clyde and Chloe’s parents enjoy their gift!

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      COMMENTS

      I LOVE these photos! The colors are amazing and the dog are beautiful. I enjoyed reading the narrative. I am just starting out, and I am doing practice shoots with friends’ pets, glad to hear you went through the same emotions when you started, and look where you are now! Thanks for sharing.

      That dog playground looks like a lot of fun. Where is it?

      I’m sure they will LOVE this gift! How very cool. The last shot against the red door rocks. I love the blinking shots too… and the yawning shots, and the tongue hanging out shots. Pretty much any shots that human clients would hate of themselves, hehe.

      Oh, so fun! These are really gorgeous dogs!

      well done! love them! you really captured the essence and personality of each dog. moose sends his slobbers, and wonders when you’ll be coming back with more of that tasty American cheese.

      Love it Love it Love it all! And you are So Right on the blinking doggy pic– 5 Starts indeed!

      Li, thank you so much for the transparency in your writing. Just yesterday I sent out an email to friends and family to begin lining up some portfolio building shoots with their furry ones. This morning I had an inbox full of replies and inquiries about shoots for this summer, and I found myself both excited and thinking ‘oh my gawd what am i doing?!’ It’s oh so cliche, but really it is not unlike that feeling you get when you are climbing that first giant hill on a roller coaster. Both your work and your writing is so inspiring (and a bit theraputic), I can only hope that I can do the same for someone one day.

      Ahhh you know, I just get such a happy feeling when I stop by your blog and see your animal pictures, it really does put a smile on my face after a long day. Keep up the incredibly good work.

      So good, Li!! I love the the amazing neighborhood you live! And I just want to snuggle those dogs!

      OMG the cute! It burns! BURNS! :) You need to come out to California & photograph my boys. Seriously, sun, beach, cats, I could scrounge up an akida, a jack rustle terrior, puppies, the tallest cats you’ve ever seen, alpacas, llamas, donkeys, ostridges. I’m a cornicopia of animal connections ;) Seriously, west coast it :)

      I love the play-fighting shots. So funny! And the colors of your neighborhood are wonderful!

      OK, those playfighting shots make me wish we still had Logan’s sister. They looked really vicious when they were doing it, but when we pulled them apart, they would just jump back in!

      I talked to my mother today. She LOVES the photos. She put them directly across the bed so she sees them every morning when she wakes up. Can’t ask for more than that!

      These are the funnest shots. I love the color and the dogs look like the happiest dogs on the planet. Such a great job capturing that spirit.