If you've been searching for a photographer to capture your older dog — the one with the gray muzzle and the slow morning rise and the look that still absolutely destroys you — you've probably come across a few different terms.
Legacy sessions. End of life sessions. Rainbow sessions.
These are all real, meaningful things offered by pet photographers. And they're all, essentially, the same thing I do at BarkHop Studio. But I call them something different: senior portraits for dogs.
Here's why — and why I think that reframe matters.
First: What Do These Terms Actually Mean?
The pet photography community has developed a beautiful, intentional niche around photographing older animals and those approaching the end of their lives. The language they use reflects that intention:
End of life sessions
Rainbow sessions
Senior portraits for dogs
Legacy sessions focus on creating something lasting — portraits that survive the dog, that live on the wall, that become part of how a family holds onto who that animal was. A legacy session is about documentation with intention.
End of life sessions are often booked when a dog has received a difficult diagnosis or when a family knows their time together is growing short. The name is honest and direct. It's a session for the final chapter.
Rainbow sessions reference "the rainbow bridge" — a term many pet owners use for the passage of a beloved animal. These sessions are often booked in the last weeks of a pet's life, sometimes urgently, always with enormous love.
All three terms carry weight and meaning. And all three describe something I am honored to photograph at BarkHop Studio. But when I sit with those phrases, I notice they all look toward an ending. I wanted a name that looks at what's still here.
"Senior portraits for dogs" is about the dog in front of you right now — not the loss on the horizon. It's about saying: this chapter is worth celebrating." Do I recognize what is on the horizon. Absolutely, it's a path I've traveled and a horizon that awaits me in my future. But, these senior portrait sessions are about capturing your dog's personality, just like a puppy portrait session is about capturing that phase in their life.
Senior Portraits for Dogs: A Reframe
Think about how we talk about senior portraits for humans. For teenagers, senior portraits are a rite of passage — a celebration of a milestone, a documentation of who someone is at a significant moment in their life. They're joyful. They're about presence. They're about saying: this person, at this stage, matters.
Why wouldn't we offer the same thing to our dogs?
Senior portraits for dogs are exactly that: a celebration of your dog at this stage of life. The slower pace, the deeper gaze, the gray that crept in so gradually you didn't quite notice until one morning you really looked. Senior portraits honor the dog your puppy became. The companion who knows you better than most humans do.
A senior portrait session at BarkHop Studio is not primarily about impending loss — even when loss is near. It's primarily about love. About this animal. About now.
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