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Correspondence
Puppy Pages
Owner's Album
Our Photo Album
Photo Hints
"Over the Rainbow"
Info
on Scotties:
General
Info
About Blacks
About Brindles
About Wheatens
Find our puppies on

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Hints for taking pictures of your Scotties
- Use a contrasting background. Blacks & Brindles need a light
background to bring them out, and Wheatens need a colorful background to keep
them from washing out. See the examples below:
Here you can see how
Bryn disappears into the dark background.
With the lighter
background and flooring, Babe shows well.
Notice how this
Wheaten's body blends into Duane's shirt.
See how the blue
background brings out Fergie's colors & shades.
- Frame your Scottie well in the photo, not taking in too much or too little
background.
In this shot, the Scottie
is too far away, and the grass could be less important.
This is a bit too
close, and we lose the ears up top.
A very well framed Scottie,
with just about equal borders all around. There's enough other objects
to make the picture nice, but very little clutter.
- Much as you might love to do multiple dog shots, like-colored Scotties
blend together in photos...
These wheaten
brothers look like a 2-headed dog!
This Scottie has a head
at both ends!
However, mixing &
matching works nicely.
Or, just make sure the dogs
are separate within the photo.
- Face shots can be a nice way to show your Scottie, as is evident in this
photo of Duke.

Hints for sending us pictures of your
Scotties
If you're taking pictures of your Scottie with a digital camera, send them
along "as is". Don't worry about the size of the file, we'll reduce it as
needed for the website.
If you're going to scan a photo of your Scottie to send us, the following
guides can help.
- The resolution displayed on a screen is only 96 dpi (dots per inch), so
you really don't need a big number for your scan. We recommend 150 dpi,
so that if we need to do any enlargement or cropping, you have enough data.
- If you can choose the setting, Millions of Colors (24 bit) is the best way
to go. This gives the most flexibility for changing the brightness or
contrast later.
- JPG is the best file type for what we are doing. We can convert
other file types, however, if you don't get a choice (or aren't sure...)
- Standard 3x5 inch or 4x6 inch pictures are just fine. We'll reduce
anything we need to for the site. Anything smaller than 2x2 inch
(300x300 pixels) is going to be hard to use.
Please send us your pictures
- we love 'em all!
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