Fine Art Portrait Sessions · Brisbane & Sunshine Coast

Some dogs are once in a lifetime. Their portrait should be too.

A small number of sittings each year, by enquiry

You Know This Feeling

Four thousand photos on your phone. Almost none of the two of you.

You photograph them constantly — asleep in the sun, mid-zoomie, that head tilt that gets you every time. But you’re always behind the camera. Never in the frame.

And this dog is not just a dog. They’re your shadow. Your constant. The one who sat with you through things nobody else saw.

The families who come to me aren’t looking for cute pictures — they have thousands. They come for the one thing a phone can never give them: the two of you, together, in a work of art that will hang on your wall for the rest of your life.

A woman holding her dog close at golden hour
No one has ever told me they regretted booking a session — only that they wished they hadn’t waited so long.
Zoe McGrath
The Experience

More than a photo shoot. A finished work of art for your home.

You won’t receive a USB stick of files to forget about in a drawer. You’ll receive finished artwork — museum-grade wall art, an heirloom album, hand-finished fine art prints — crafted by Australian artisans and made to outlast us all.

I

The conversation

We begin with a relaxed consultation — about your dog, your story together, and the walls of your home. Every session is designed around where the artwork will live, before a single photo is taken.

II

The sitting

Golden light, a beautiful location, and a session that moves entirely at your dog’s pace. Years of dog-training experience mean wild, shy, anxious or stubborn dogs aren’t a problem — they’re my specialty.

III

The reveal

Weeks of hand-crafted artistry later, you’ll see your finished collection — previewed on photos of your own walls. No pressure, no minimum, ever. You choose only the pieces you fall in love with.

Recent Work

Their soul, not just their face

Upon a Butterfly Wish — gold award-winning fine art portrait of a spaniel watching a butterfly Owner and Border Collie sharing a quiet moment Staffy standing among sandstone columns Smiling staffy lying in a pile of autumn leaves, one leaf on her head Four puppies sitting in a row Family with their dog at the beach Three dogs sitting together in golden forest light Fine art dog portrait in natural light Two small dogs perched on their owner's shoulders at sunset
Kind Words

Almost everyone cries at the reveal

Not because of anything I say — but because it’s the first time they’ve ever seen their bond from the outside.

Incredible experience from start to finish. Mind blown with the end result and images of our fur babies that we will cherish forever. Don’t hesitate. Zoe has an eye for detail and is incredibly talented.
Lilly & Poppy’s family
Five stars is not enough for this amazing photographer! Zoe is an artist through and through. Her work is magical — she creates the most beautiful scenes and memories with your precious furbabies. Start to finish, Zoe is the best in the business!
Tamarah Firth
A client embracing her dog during their session
The Things You’re Quietly Worried About

Let me put your mind at rest

  • “My dog won’t sit still.”Almost none of the dogs I photograph will sit and stay — that’s my job, not yours. Years of agility, obedience and trick training mean I speak fluent dog. The wild ones often make the most extraordinary portraits.
  • “My dog is anxious or reactive.”I live with a dog who finds other dogs overwhelming, so I plan for this personally — quiet locations, quiet times, and your dog safely on leash the whole session. You’ll never see the leash in the artwork.
  • “He’s old. Is it too late?”It is never too early — but it can become too late. Senior dogs are photographed gently, lying down if they like, with nothing asked of them. Families with a difficult diagnosis receive priority dates.
  • “I hate being in photos.”You won’t be posing — you’ll be with your dog, and I’ll quietly direct everything else. My clients who ‘aren’t photogenic’ are the ones who cry at the reveal, because they finally see themselves the way their dog sees them.
  • “Will I get a hard sell at the reveal?”Never. The reveal is a service, not a sales pitch — there is no minimum order and no pressure. You choose only the artwork you love, and plenty of families take their time deciding.
  • “What does it cost?”The session fee is $495, and at your reveal you choose your path: a collection (from $2,900, with the fee credited) or à la carte with two complimentary 11″×14″ fine art prints ($580) to take home — more than the fee itself. Most families choose The Heirloom. Every number is published on the Investment page.
By Design

A handful of sessions a year. On purpose.

Each session takes weeks of my hands-on artistry — from the first conversation to the final inspection of your finished artwork. I’m not willing to rush that for anyone.

So I accept only a handful of sessions each year. It means every family gets all of me: my full attention, my best craft, and a finished collection I would proudly hang in my own home.

For dogs in their senior years, or living with a difficult diagnosis, I hold priority dates. Tell me when you enquire, and we will move quickly — gently, and with no fuss.

Zoe and Lexie looking out over the water
First place winning portrait — a staffy stepping onto weathered driftwood, Royal Queensland Show digital photography category
Recognition

First place at the Ekka. Gold at the national awards.

This portrait won First Place in digital photography at the Royal Queensland Show (Ekka) — and the Show loved it enough to feature it on the cover of the following year’s photography schedule.

My fine art piece Upon a Butterfly Wish was awarded Gold at the Australian Digital Photography Awards, where my portraiture has been recognised across multiple years.

Awards aren’t why I photograph dogs. But when you’re investing in artwork for your walls, you deserve to know it’s in award-winning hands.

Australian Photographic Society Photographic association member Society of Wedding and Portrait Photographers MTog badge

The best time was when they were a puppy. The second-best time is now.

It starts with hello — and a conversation about your dog.