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Dog Photographer Erin Vey bio picture

Meet Erin Vey

I am a dog lover first.

A photographer second.

By some random chance of fate, I was able to combine the two loves into the coolest job ever: A Dog Photographer

I grew up in a family where dogs were always an integral part of our lives and most importantly, members of the family. Most of my childhood was spent with various Basset Hounds of the lovable but extremely stubborn variety. We never had less than 2 at any given time, sometimes 3, and the occasional stray that one of us would bring home for a visit.

After a short stint doing portrait work, which I still love, I realized my true calling is capturing the essence and personality of dogs. Upon reflection, I feel that my time doing portrait work was not wasted. Because of it, my experience with portrait work flows beautifully into working with people and their dogs.

My husband and I are owned by the fabulous Miss Gracie, a 5 year old Great Dane who brings energy and life into our house. You’ll see her around here a lot, she loves having her portrait taken (at least I like to think so).  She is a complete Diva and if you stick around long enough, you'll know what I'm talking about!

What an amazing adventure this has been so far. I’m so glad you are here experiencing it with me.

Real Words

The most common email I get revolves around wanting to know how I got started in photography, how do I market, what kind of advice can I give about becoming a working pet photographer. I can answer those questions but those answers don’t really get to the heart of where I am at in my business and really my life.

My friend Deb posted these awesome words of wisdom on her blog the other day (by Cheryl Jacobs), but I didn’t have time to sit down and read them. I finally got some time this weekend to read each one and it was such a great reminder about keeping things in perspective, being a confident photographer, and following your own path.

Thank you Deb for always providing reality checks and inspiration to look deeper into our photography. Thank you Cheryl Jacobs for your honest and real world advice.

I think a lot of this advice can also be applied outside of the photography industry and into your own daily profession or personal life, whatever that may be.

[ STYLE ]

- Style is a voice, not a prop or an action. If you can buy it, borrow it, download it, or steal it, it is not a style. Don’t look outward for your style; look inward.

- Know your stuff. Luck is a nice thing, but a terrifying thing to rely on. It’s like money; you only have it when you don’t need it.

- Never apologize for your own sense of beauty. Nobody can tell you what you should love. Do what you do brazenly and unapologetically. You cannot build your sense of aesthetics on a consensus.

- Say no. Say it often. It may be difficult, but you owe it to yourself and your clients. Turn down jobs that don’t fit you, say no to overbooking yourself. You are no good to anyone when you’re stressed and anxious.

- Learn to say “I’m a photographer” out loud with a straight face. If you can’t say it and believe it, you can’t expect anyone else to, either.

- You cannot specialize in everything.

- Know your style before you hang out your shingle. If you don’t, your clients will dictate your style to you. That makes you nothing more than a picture taker. Changing your style later will force you to start all over again, and that’s tough.

- Accept critique, but don’t apply it blindly. Just because someone said it does not make it so. Critiques are opinions, nothing more. Consider the advice, consider the perspective of the advice giver, consider your style and what you want to convey in your work. Implement only what makes sense to implement. That doesn’t not make you ungrateful, it makes you independent.

- Leave room for yourself to grow and evolve. It may seem like a good idea to call your business “Precious Chubby Tootsies”….but what happens when you decide you love to photograph seniors? Or boudoir?

- Remember that if your work looks like everyone else’s, there’s no reason for a client to book you instead of someone else. Unless you’re cheaper. And nobody wants to be known as “the cheaper photographer”.

- Gimmicks and merchandise will come and go, but honest photography is never outdated.

- It’s easier to focus on buying that next piece of equipment than it is to accept that you should be able to create great work with what you’ve got. Buying stuff is a convenient and expensive distraction. Spend money on equipment ONLY when you’ve outgrown your current equipment and you’re being limited by it.

- Learn that people photography is about people, not about photography. Great portraits are a side effect of a strong human connection.

- Never forget why you started taking pictures in the first place. Excellent technique is a great tool, but a terrible end product. The best thing your technique can do is not call attention to itself.

- Never compare your journey with someone else’s. It’s a marathon with no finish line. Someone else may start out faster than you, may seem to progress more quickly than you, but every runner has his own pace. Your journey is your journey, not a competition. You will never “arrive”. No one ever does.

- Embrace frustration. It pushes you to learn and grow, broadens your horizons, and lights a fire under you when your work has gone cold. Nothing is more dangerous to an artist than complacence.

Diane Lewis - Amen to those points!!! Great post! I still get the people who just can't comprehend that I am a pet photographer... and do nothing else...as in a "real job" in their minds... what little do they know is that yes there is such a thing as a full time pet photographer. I love it more than words can describe! It's not easy at times, and I've never worked harder in my life... but it's a journey I am so blessed to be on... I cringe at the thought had I not made the decision 10 years ago to start doing something I love and get out of my corporate job. I do need to take more time for myself...but my dogs ensure that I take a little time everyday to take them to the park to regroup, nothing like a walk in the woods with your best friends to remind you what's most important in life. Being able to document special moments & bonds people share with their pets is so fulfilling....I do out of my love of animals from the bottom of my soul...and I have thank my soulmate dog Bailey for inspiring me to make my dreams come true as it was photos of him that helped push me to become a pet photographer! Thank you Bailey!

Christine Pobke - I've already read this post multiple times but I'm reading it again... it's nice to remind myself of these truisms. Thanks for sharing, Erin. :) You're refreshingly honest and sincere.

Amy - I had read this post before...like it so much that I printed it out for myself...and remembered it later and wanted to share it with my (few) readers :) It's linked here among some other great quotes: http://allenaim.blogspot.com/2009/06/philosophy-of-photography.html Thank you! This post is SUCH an inspiration!

Cheryl Jacobs Nicolai - Erin, glad you found the article useful! I still have to read it myself every now and then. Thanks for passing it on. - CJ

Sue - That is so right on!

gail - This is a great post. Every photog should read it.

Haley - Great post- thank you!

Zhenya - Your comments above is just another reason I love you and your work (and Gracie too). I always feel happy and hopeful after I read something like the above. Sometimes I think I'm just kidding myself taking random pictures of a bookshelf. No one is going to buy a picture of a bookshelf. But like you say, I might think its a stupid picture but someone might come along and think that thats the most beautiful picture they've seen. So thank you. Thank you for inspiring people like me who are only 20 (Just had a b-day!!!) and living in boring 'ole North Carolina. Cause someday you may see me in a book --- well not yet. Thanks again. Give Gracie a kiss. Oh, just want to let you know I"m going to have my 2n (YEAH!!!!) photo exhibit soon.

Puna - These are great words of wisdom. Thanks for passing that on. Maybe one day...

leah g - great post. it is a great reminder for me on this journey. thank you for sharing these thoughts.

Kevin - Thank you for sharing this!

Bonnie Berry - Cheryl is amazing. I took her workshop a few years ago and I STILL hear her words in my head almost daily.

Kim Mallory - Thanks for posting this - very well written and an amazing message... there's no such thing as competition... we do this because we have a burning passion - something we don't ever want to lose sight of.

Deb Schwedhelm Photo - thanks pal. you inspire me!! love ya! deb

Becky - Great post. Thanks for sharing it!

PJ - Jodie lead me over here from her blog and I'm glad she did. My family are animal lovers and your photos capture them in such a loving & expressivly way. I want to thank you for posting your wonderfully profound words of wisdom. It was something I truly needed after a super busy Monday, which included a photo shoot of our Special Olympics Adult Swim Team swimming a fund raising marathon. Jodie has really been an inspiration for me, so day by day my confidence grows a little at a time. My daughter is usually the photographer and I am the gopher (by my own choosing!)She was in the pool with the swimmers, so I was behind the camera! After a very minor panic attack, it was all good! Then reading your words tonight has put many things into perspective! Thank you again, Peggy

Meredith Perdue - Great article! Thanks for posting it!

Victoria - Awesome! Thanks for sharing these. I feel inspired!

-shawna- - Erin, as someone just starting out...I want to thank you for this wisdom. I needed to hear some of these things! :)

julie h - Thanks for sharing those! Some of them were great reminders and other were things I needed to hear for the first time.

jodie - wow. just what i needed to hear... especially the second to last line. I forget that it is not a race and want to be big now. whatever "big" means! this was so so so good to read!

Cathy G - Wonderful article, great read! Thank You! I too am a Photographer~

Andreas Holm - GREAT post Erin!

Ellie - I so needed to read this:) Thank you for posting!

Courtney - BEAUTIFULLY said. and words i so needed today - thank you for this post!

Jill - thanks so much for this.

CreationsAnew - Thanks for the "real words"..they are righit on! RObin

Rhonda Bracaloni - Thank you for the read. I am a photographer and proud of it. I hope my work speaks for itself. :) Rareimage Photography

Christina - Thanks for posting this article. It's so true.

dana pugh - wow...this was great. Thanks for sharing.

Jennifer Chaney - Love it! thanks so much for posting.

Sara Montour - lovelovelove this! Thank you!

Laura Reaux - Incredible! I feel like printing out key quotes from this & hanging them on the wall. Thanks for sharing!

tara whitney - amazing, id like to post this on my blog as well.

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