He's been by your side for years. He deserves to be on your wall.
Upload one photo. We render him in the tradition of oil painting — warm tones, dramatic light, the look that's hung in homes for 300 years. Every portrait personally reviewed by Mercy before it ships. From $200, framed and ready to hang.
your dog. on the wall. where the eye expects him.
Framed museum-quality portrait. Custom framing from $200. Or just the digital file from $37.
The gap
Maybe it's the leather chair you spent too much on. The brass lamp from the antique fair. The bookshelf that took years to fill. The room that just feels considered — not decorated, considered.
And then your dog walks in.
Your Lab, who's been sleeping in the same spot on the couch for nine years. Your golden, who waits at the door every single time like you've been gone for months. The dog who has been, quietly and completely, part of every chapter of your life in this house.
He sits down in that room. And there's nothing of him on the walls.
That's the gap. That's why this page exists.
Why a painting says something a photo can't
That's not sentiment. That's 500 years of how humans have marked what they loved.
Before photography existed, the way you said this one matters was you commissioned the painter. Not because paintings were prettier than reality — but because putting someone on canvas was a statement. It meant: this life is worth preserving.
That tradition didn't stop with kings and generals. It ran straight through to dogs. Especially dogs. The same homes that had portraits of their owners had portraits of their dogs, often in the same rooms, often the same size. Because the dogs were family. They were always family.
A vintage-style oil painting of your dog carries that same weight. The warm palette. The dramatic light. The dark background that tells your eye: look at him. Just him. Not because it's old-fashioned — because that's what that format has always meant.
He's worth that.
The tradition, briefly
You don't need to know these names. But they're why this style looks the way it does.
For three hundred years, a group of painters made a specific kind of image: dogs, rendered with the same gravity given to portraits of generals and lords. Warm tones. Dark studio backgrounds. Light that falls on the subject like it matters where it lands.
Anatomical precision. The horse and hound paintings that hang in every English country house.
Victorian Britain's great dog painter. Queen Victoria's favorite. The studio sittings going at Sotheby's for $9,500+ today.
Sporting and equestrian — the bright outdoor light, the loose confident brushwork. President of the Royal Academy.
The first major woman in animal painting. Edward VII's favorite. Dogs as individuals, not specimens.
Working dogs at rest. Foxhounds in straw. The aesthetic that became "country-house dog portrait."
Their canvases hang in the Royal Academy and the Yale Center for British Art. Their studio pieces trade at Sotheby's. That aesthetic — the palette, the light, the feeling that the subject deserves to be looked at — is exactly what we borrow when we render your dog.
You don't need to know their names.
You just need to recognize the feeling when you see it.
Four roads that don't quite get there
$1,500–$15,000+. Beautiful. Not your dog. Someone else's pointer from 1882, hung where yours should hang.
$2,000–$5,000. Three months. A stranger's interpretation. You describe him over email. They paint what they imagine. When it arrives, the breed is right. The dog isn't.
$250–$500. Six weeks. Same problem at a lower price point. The collar's right. The soul isn't. Tucked under the bed, never spoken of again.
Eight seconds. Cotton-candy fur. Plastic eyes. You've seen a friend post one. You felt bad for her. That's not what you're looking for.
The fear underneath all of them is the same:
"It'll look like a $50 Photoshop filter and I'll be embarrassed to hang it."
That's exactly what the next section is about.
How the bridge gets built
A few years ago my son came to me with a question.
"Mom — what if AI could render the painting in the classical oil tradition, but YOU reviewed every single one before it shipped?"
That's exactly what we built.
You upload one photo. The AI studies it, then re-renders your dog in the language of vintage-style oil painting — warm-toned palette, dramatic studio lighting, the dark background that makes the subject feel like the only thing in the room. Period-correct brushwork. The look that took painters years to learn.
Then I look at it.
My eyes. Real screen. Coffee in hand. If his one floppy ear is sitting wrong, if the markings on his chest aren't quite his, if his eyes aren't his eyes — it doesn't go out. We re-render. I'd rather make you wait an extra hour than ship something that misses him.
"The AI does the brushwork. I do the final touch — the part where it has to look like him."
— Mercy
What's in a framed portrait
Framed portraits start at $200. Most pieces land between $250-$500, depending on size, mat, and frame style. Premium configurations — large sizes, ornate frames, UV glazing — can run up to about $1,400. Archival giclée print on Hahnemühle Fine Art paper, custom framed by our museum-grade printing partner with 22 frame collections, 28 mat colors, and 4 glazing options. The aesthetic is vintage-style, in the Old Masters tradition; the rendering is AI; the review is human. We don't claim hand-painted, and we don't claim antique. Or just the digital file from $37 if you'd rather print it yourself.
What the alternatives cost
| 1stDibs / Sotheby's antique | $1,500 – $15,000+ | someone else's dog |
| Hand-painted commission (artist) | $2,000 – $5,000+ | 3 months · slow |
| Etsy oil commission | $250 – $500 | 6 weeks · generic |
| Pet Pic · Framed, Mercy-reviewed | $200 – $500 | Museum quality · your dog |
The honest version: a real antique is a real antique. We don't replace one. What we replace is the part where the dog is someone else's.
Recent Mercy-reviewed portraits
Real before / after pairs — the phone photograph the customer uploaded, beside the Mercy-reviewed oil painting that came back hours later. Each pose preserved. Each markings preserved. Print + frame ships from our museum-grade partner.
Before · phone
After · oil
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Before · phone
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After · oil nine recent Mercy-reviewed portraits. each pose preserved. each ready to be framed.
Where it hangs
above the mantle. beside the lamp. where the eye expects him.
In thirty years
Here's the honest reason this page exists.
The same kind of message kept landing in our inbox. Not asking about price. Not asking about turnaround. Just — "I want a real oil painting of him. Before he goes."
Not a print. Not a phone photo in a nice frame. Not a filter that took eight seconds and looks like it. An oil painting. The warm tones. The dark background. The feeling that he was worth sitting for.
That feeling isn't nostalgia. It's the oldest thing in the room.
Twenty years from now, your daughter is going to walk through your hallway — past the bookshelf that took years to fill, past the brass lamp, past everything you chose carefully and slowly — and she's going to stop in front of his portrait. The same way you stopped in front of something that mattered in someone else's house, once, a long time ago.
The format is the same one humans have used for 500 years to say: this one mattered.
The subject is hers. Because he was hers too.
Senior dogs are the most common commission we receive. Not because people wait until the end — but because somewhere around year nine or ten, you look at him sleeping in the afternoon light and you think: I should do something about this.
You should.
What it looks like when it works
There's a dog named Winston.
Before · phone Senior boy. Gray around the muzzle. His mom sent us one phone photo — Tuesday afternoon, kitchen lighting, nothing special. We rendered him in classical oil-painting style. Mercy looked at it, sent it back once because his eyes weren't quite right.
First pass · eyes wrong ✕ We re-rendered.
After · oil · shipped ✓ She had the final in her inbox a day later. Wrote back five words.
That's the whole standard.
If we can't get there, it doesn't ship.
About Mercy
They call me the Fur Baby Mama — and around here, that's not a marketing nickname. That's literally the job.
I have two dogs. Yogilove — Yogi for short — has been my Shih Tzu Terrier for eleven years. Miabelle came later — a Shih Poo who never quite figured out she wasn't the boss. I know what it looks like when a portrait gets the dog right, because I know what it looks like when you love one enough to notice every small wrong thing.
Every portrait that leaves Pet Pic Portraits gets reviewed by me before it comes to you. My eyes. Real screen. The time to actually look.
I'm telling you this up front because I want you to know what kind of operation you've landed on. We're not an app that spits out a filter and moves on. We're a small shop where the owner's mother checks every portrait personally. That's the whole pitch.
Pet-Parent Approved. Every portrait passes Mercy's review before it ships. If something's off, we re-render before you ever see it.
FAQ
No — and we'll always tell you that upfront. It's a vintage-style oil portrait of your dog, rendered in the Old Masters tradition. The aesthetic is period — warm tones, dramatic light, dark background — but the subject is your dog, today. Not a 19th-century antique. Not hand-painted. AI-rendered, Mercy-reviewed, fully disclosed.
Most framed portraits land at $200-$500, depending on size, mat, and frame style. Premium configurations — large sizes, ornate frames, UV glazing — can run up to about $1,400. That includes archival giclée print on Hahnemühle Fine Art paper, your choice of 22 frame collections, 28 mat colors, and 4 glazing options, and Mercy's personal review before it ships. The high-resolution digital file is available from $37 if you'd rather print and frame it yourself.
That's exactly what Mercy's review is for. After the AI renders the portrait, Mercy looks at it against your photo — markings, head shape, eyes, the specific way your dog holds himself. If it misses him, it doesn't ship. We re-render until it's right.
The aesthetic is — warm palette, dramatic studio lighting, period-correct brushwork, the dark background that's been behind oil portraits for 300 years. Like a heritage-made tweed jacket: the tradition is real, the production is modern. We're upfront about the process every time.
Many people do. A senior dog, or one you've recently lost. Oil painting has been the format for honoring a life's companion for 500 years for exactly this reason — it carries differently than a photograph. If you're ordering for that reason, Mercy knows. She looks at those ones a little longer.
Most portraits are rendered and reviewed within a day or two. Framed prints ship from our museum-grade printing partner within their standard production window — we'll give you exact timing at checkout based on your size and frame selection.
Yes. Sporting breeds, toy breeds, mixed breeds, seniors, puppies. If you have a clear photo — good lighting, face visible — we can work with it. The classical oil tradition was built on dogs in every size and shape. Yours steps right into it.
Yes. The standard offer is the framed Hahnemühle Fine Art print, but we also offer gallery canvas in a sleek float frame — the canvas appears to float inside a modern frame, museum gallery style. Same Mercy review, same museum-grade printing partner. Available alongside the framed print at checkout. Float-framed canvas is a different aesthetic — modern gallery rather than ornate heritage — and tends to suit contemporary rooms better than traditional ones.
Custom portraits are made-to-order, so we don't accept returns once they ship — but here's how we make sure you don't need one: Mercy reviews every portrait before it leaves our studio. If she sees anything off — wrong markings, eyes not quite right, framing wrong — she sends it back to be re-rendered before you ever see it. By the time it arrives at your door, it's already been approved by the person whose name is on the work. The one exception: if your portrait arrives damaged in transit, contact us with a photo and we'll replace it.
AI does the period brushwork. I do the looking-at-it-and-making-sure-it's-him part. Then our museum-grade printer custom-frames it in your choice of 27 styles. Less than half what a hand-painted commission costs. The painting that was always supposed to be of your dog.
$200-$500 framed · museum-grade · ships ready to hang
A short library of the Old Masters whose aesthetic we draw on. You don't need to know their names — but they're why this style looks the way it does.
The father of animal painting. Anatomical precision. The dignified pose.
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Queen Victoria's favorite. The man who made dog portraiture canonical.
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The sporting painter who made animals feel alive. Outdoor light. Movement.
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