Founding Member Special: 50% off Pro & Enterprise for 12 months Claim Yours →

Services on BreederHQ Marketplace

Animal Photography

Browse animal photographers on BreederHQ Marketplace. Litter photography for breeders, conformation show win photos, equine portraiture and sport action, working-dog action, and breeder marketing media. Animal photographers are a specialty: the right one for newborn litters is rarely the right one for sport action.

Browse Photographers

Featured Photographers

No live photographers yet. Provider acquisition is in progress — listings will surface here automatically as providers join.

Provider? Be the first photographer on the Marketplace.

Listing first means your business ranks first in search results, captures early inquiries, and earns the "Rising Star" badge as you build a track record.

Start a Listing →

What This Category Covers

Animal photography spans newborn studio work, show-day coverage, equine portraiture, and sport action.

  • Litter and puppy photography (newborn through 8 weeks)
  • Stacked/show-pose photography for breeders
  • AKC and UKC win photos at the ring
  • Equine portraiture (in-hand, under saddle, conformation)
  • Equine sport action (jumping, dressage, eventing, racing)
  • Dog sport action (agility, lure coursing, dock diving)
  • Working-dog and field photography (gun dogs, herding)
  • Breeder marketing media (website and social content)
  • Family lifestyle with animals
  • Memorial and senior portraits

How to Browse on the Marketplace

Filters that matter for finding the right photographer:

  • Specialty. Studio newborn vs. ring action vs. equine portrait vs. sport action are different crafts. Filter to the work you actually need.
  • Species expertise. Equine photography is its own discipline. Show-ring photography is its own discipline. Filter accordingly.
  • Service area. Studio-based vs. on-location vs. show-circuit (photographer travels the circuit). Match to where the work happens.
  • Deliverables. Print rights, digital files, retouching, breeder-marketing-package vs. one-time session.

What to Look For When Hiring a Photographer

  • Portfolio in your specialty. Litter photos for litter work. Stacked breeder photos for breed marketing. Action shots for sport. Generalist portfolios rarely deliver specialist results.
  • Comfort with your species. A photographer who hasn't worked around horses is dangerous around horses. Confirm species comfort before booking.
  • Lighting and edit style. Bright airy vs. dark moody vs. clean breeder-marketing style. Look at full sessions, not just hero shots.
  • Litter photographer logistics. Travel to your home or breeder studio, multi-puppy posing experience, sanitation between litters. Newborn work is its own ecosystem.
  • Show photographer credentials. Official show-photographer rights vary by club and venue. Confirm whether the photographer is the venue's official or unofficial photographer.
  • Contract and rights. Print rights, social media use, breeder website rights, and the photographer's portfolio rights. Spell it out before the shoot.