The single most frequent request I get as a photographer at dog shows is "can you get a great moving shot of my dog?" And the answer is: maybe. Great moving shots are often difficult to define but we all know one when we see it. Everything is in perfect harmony; perfect balance. The dog looks as if it is gliding along effortlessly. To me, the "perfect" moving shot has the front on one side fully extended and the rear on the other side fully extended with the opposite legs fully contracted under the dog's middle. Something like this.
In that shot of Rowdy at 10 years of age, he's fully balanced although probably not as athletic as he was as a kid. Still, this is what I consider to be an excellent moving shot of a dog that could move excellently.
So, what are the components of a "great" moving shot?
1. First and foremost, the dog has to move well. That seems to be obvious but not all dogs move in perfect harmony. Some move very athletically but their fronts are never quite in synch with their rears.
2. You have to be in exactly the right place to catch it -- usually that means directly across from the dogs to get them in profile. At the ARC National, I was asked to shoot the Top 20 dogs in the ring to try to capture some action shots. While I wasn't able to get directly across from them because of how the room was set up, I was able to capture a few good moving shots.
Here's Ch Pfeffer-Schloss On The Town, UDX, RE, BH, TT, TDI, WETT (Turbo).
And here's Ch Loral's Number One Caesar (Caesar) the winner of the Top 20 Competition.
3. You have to be able to capture the moment when they are fully in synch. To increase my chances, I shoot bursts and track the dogs as they move across the ring in front of me. Sometimes you get it; sometimes you don't. Here's Ch Acosta's Mobsters Bandido Bueno.
4. You have to get lucky. For everything to come together at a moment in time and have the shutter go off at that exact moment isn't pure skill. It takes more than a modicum of luck. Now, the harder I work and the more I plan, the luckier I get but that doesn't change the fact that you have to be lucky to get that really good moving shot. We have a Weimaraner for an advertising client and we ran her and her owner around our cul-de-sac for almost an hour to get this moving shot.
And, while she's crossing over in the middle, it shows how athletic she is.
On the other hand, Standard Poodles aren't supposed to move like Sporting dogs.
Nor are Whippets.
The bottom line is that you can do everything right but if the dog doesn't have superb movement, you'll never get a shot of him moving superbly. Great movement is something I value very highly as a breeder. To me, it demonstrates what the dog was originally bred to do. Rottweilers, for example, were bred to drive the herd -- cattle or sheep -- to market. They were supposed to be able to trot all day. When I would walk Rowdy for 3 to 5 miles every day -- with him trotting the entire way -- I realized that he could have done that all day. His son, Max, has similar movement.
As does his great granddaughter, Moxie, here training for her first show in a few weeks.
So when folks ask me if I can get a great moving shot of their dog, I tell them I'll try. And, more times than not, I do get lucky

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Jim