June 21, 2026 3 min read
If you’re searching for a pet portrait from photo, the most important decision isn’t the portrait style, frame or canvas size. It’s the photo itself.
A skilled artist can enhance colours, improve composition and transform a pet into anything from a royal pet portrait to a modern masterpiece. What they cannot do is recover details that never existed in the image.
At Paw & Glory, one of the most common issues we see isn’t artwork-related at all. It’s customers choosing photos based on emotion rather than clarity. The photo that makes you laugh isn’t always the photo that creates the best portrait.
Here’s how to choose an image that gives your artist the best possible starting point.
Before uploading a photo, check:
One decent photo really is your entire job.
A modern smartphone image is usually more than good enough if the face is sharp and well lit. Our photo guide covers this in more detail.

We often find customers choose photos taken from too far away. A photo may look lovely on a phone screen but reveal very little facial detail when enlarged for artwork.
Different pets suit different styles.
| Style | Best For |
|---|---|
| Royal Pet Portrait | Pets with strong expressions |
| Funny Pet Portrait | Playful personalities |
| Framed Pet Portrait | Traditional interiors |
| Pet Canvas | Larger wall displays |
| Pet Memorial Portrait | Remembrance artwork |
| Multi-Pet Portrait | Households with multiple pets |
A grumpy bulldog often works brilliantly in a royal costume.
A permanently bewildered cockapoo may suit something lighter and more humorous.
The goal is not simply choosing artwork you like. It’s choosing artwork that suits the pet.
Some of the strongest portraits come from matching the costume to the pet’s expression rather than the owner’s favourite style.
One of the biggest decisions comes after the artwork itself.

Best for:
A framed pet portrait feels complete and ready to display immediately.
Best for:
A pet canvas tends to feel softer and more substantial as wall art.
Choose:
Many customers initially choose the smallest available size and later tell us they wish they had gone larger, especially for living room displays.
Multi-pet portraits require slightly different thinking.
Many people assume a single group photo is best.
In reality, separate photos often produce stronger results.
Why?
Because group photos usually contain:
Separate images allow artists to build a balanced final composition.
When creating multi-pet portraits, consistency matters more than whether the pets were photographed together.
No artist can recreate details hidden by blur.
Filters can change fur colour and eye tone.
Always start with the strongest photo.
Consider where the artwork will actually hang. Our size guide helps you choose the right dimensions.
For pet memorial artwork, the best photo is often not the newest one. Choose the image that best captures your pet’s personality.
A clear, well-lit image where the pet’s face, eyes and markings are visible.
Yes. Most excellent custom pet portraits start with smartphone images.
Yes. Separate photos often work better than one group image.
Framed works well for gifts. Canvas is often better for large feature walls.
Choose a provider that offers artwork proofs and revisions before printing — that’s exactly how it works at Paw & Glory.
The quality of a pet portrait from photo depends heavily on the image you provide.
Choose a clear photograph, match the artwork style to your pet’s personality and think carefully about where the finished piece will be displayed.
Whether you’re commissioning a custom dog portrait, custom cat portrait, funny pet portrait or pet memorial portrait, the strongest artwork usually starts the same way: with a photo that genuinely captures the animal.
The artist does the talented bit. The photo simply gives them something worth working with.
Want the complete walkthrough? Read our full guide to choosing the perfect custom pet portrait.
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