Category: Dog Art Videos

  • JibJab Coupon + Review: The Best Digital Dog Holiday Ecards

    Darby's Christmas special…

    This year, I really wanted to make a holiday video starring Darby.   After months of searching, I didn't think it would happen.  The dog-themed digital ecards that I was familiar with didn't have an option to fully include your pet.  At best, you could select a similar breed or upload an unedited photo at the end.   Also, most don't have an option to embed videos on your blog or share them on Facebook, both features I was looking for.  I considered making a video from scratch, but that made be feel overwhelmed, not part of my Christmas gift to myself — to simplify and enjoy the season.  So I had pretty much given up.  Then a friend "elfed herself" on JibJab and posted it on Facebook.  I had totally forgotten about JibJab.  Do dogs work in their videos?  Yes, they do.  It took a few tries to make a successful Darby head, the ears and the neck took the most finessing.  And it is a little annoying that you cannot go back and rework the head once it is saved.  But I got the hang of it pretty quickly.   And having my pup star in a claymation Christmas special with the music of Bing Crosby and the Andrew Sisters is awesome.

    So if you're stressing about sending holiday cards (too much paper, money, and time) or digital cards (not personal enough), I highly recommend JibJab. To get all the features I mention, you do have to subscribe. It is $12/one year.   But here is a special offer:  you can get 10% off 12-month JibJab.com subscription with Code JIBJAB10.

    P.S. JibJab also has ecards specifically for dogs.   I just didn't think they were as funny.  I love seeing Darby wearing little red mittens and dancing with Santa.  That's just me.

    P.P.S.  If you want to do the one I did with more than one dog, there is an option for that.  Or you could do you and your dog.  They actually make 5 versions of all their holiday cards to allow for different size "casts."  Another nice feature.

    Happy Holidays!

     

  • Viva Chile!

    Like everyone, I am in awe of Chile’s ingenuity and transparency as I watch the miners reborn onto the surface of the earth.  I am reminded of another Chilean hero who was never found, but who’s spirit has lived on in the attitude of the country over the last few months.  Like this hero, the Chilean people never gave up.

  • Stay by Ofer Wolberger: A Book For Your Dog

     

    This made me smile.  Watch until the end.

    Order your copy at Ofer Wolberger’s website.   Via Horses Think.

     

  • OK Go Dances With Dogs and a Goat

     

    The band OK Go dances with 12 dogs and 1 goat in their new “White Knuckles” video directed by Trish Sie, the sister of lead singer Damian Kulash.  And, like their treadmill masterpiece, “Here It Goes Again”, which Trish Sie also directed, this video was shot in one take.

    Read the full behind-the-scenes story at NY Magazine.

    Thank you Hugh Ross, Tim Quinlivan, Lori Lambert, and Linda Papineau who sent me this video. You made my day.

    I wonder if Ok Go and Trish Sie were inspired by my dad’s work with his dog Minnie in my 2008 blockbuster “Minnie the Magnificent.”

  • Dog Judo

    Dog_judo wp_IMG

    Roy and Rexley, the stars of Dog Judo

    If the summer TV season isn’t enough for you, I direct you to the Dog Judo videos starring Roy and Rexley as best mates and sparring partners.  The series is produced by 12foot6.  Roy’s blog is here.

  • Happy Birthday Mom!

    A re-release of a birthday video I made for my mom a few years ago…

    With love, Moira

  • Buddy the Hero Dog as a Work of Art

    Sometimes great art happens inadvertently.   This morning, I watched this video captured by an Alaska State Trooper’s dashboard camera and I burst into tears.  It is so haunting, beautiful, dramatic, and primal.  It is the essence of dog love and it is a masterpiece.

    Here is the story from James Halpin of the Anchorage Daily News:

    Alaska
    State Troopers plan to recognize a German shepherd named Buddy for what
    they say are his “valiant actions” guiding an officer to the scene of a
    fire earlier this month.


    Buddy’s owner, 23-year-old Ben Heinrichs, was working on a vehicle in a
    shop outside the family’s home in the Caswell Lakes area the night of
    April 4 when a spark from a heater ignited gasoline and gave Heinrichs
    flash burns to his face and second-degree burns to his left hand, he
    said.


    He went outside and rolled to put out the flames. Buddy, a 5-year-old
    companion Heinrichs has had since a puppy, had been shut in the shop,
    so Heinrichs let him out of the burning structure.


    “I just told him, ‘We need to get help,’ and then that’s the last time
    I seen him,” Heinrichs said. “I didn’t train him or nothing. He just
    took off and went and did what he did. … He was just being a good
    dog.”

    The sequence of events, as related by troopers, runs like an episode of “Lassie.”


    An officer responding to a call about the fire, trooper Terrence
    Shanigan, was having trouble finding the scene because his global
    positioning device was on the fritz, troopers spokeswoman Beth Ipsen
    said.


    Shanigan, who almost took the long way around the neighborhood, came
    across Buddy on Caswell Loop Road. The dog took off, and acting on a
    hunch, Shanigan followed the dog down a side road, she said.


    A video shot by the trooper’s dashboard camera shows Buddy trotting
    along the side of the road coming toward the officer, then looking at
    the vehicle and breaking into a run as Shanigan follows. The dog runs
    ahead of the patrol vehicle and takes a left turn, ending up at the
    burning structure.

    Troopers are convinced the dog was leading Shanigan to the fire, Ipsen said.


    “Buddy’s a pretty shy dog, and he was several blocks away just kind of
    hanging out. By all accounts this is not normal behavior for him,”
    Ipsen said. “Buddy’s not trained. This is something he did pretty much
    on his own.”


    The workshop, which was fully engulfed in flames, was destroyed, but
    Heinrichs said he thinks Buddy’s actions prevented the fire from
    spreading to the family’s home.


    Troopers plan to recognize Buddy’s bravery at a ceremony today. The
    family will get a letter and Buddy will receive a metal dog bowl
    engraved with the troopers’ logo and Buddy’s name with the words, “In
    appreciation of your diligence and assistance to Alaska State Troopers.”

    Now go hug your dog.   And have a great weekend.

  • Daido Moriyama’s Stray Dog on Sale at Christie’s

    Daido_moriyama_stray_dog

    A print of famed Japanese photographer Daido Moriyama’s iconic 1971 Stray Dog is up for auction tomorrow, April 15, 2010 at Christie’s in NYC.  It is estimated to go for $10,000 to $15,000.  Something to consider if you have a nice tax refund this week.  Visit Christie’s to place a bid.

    Stray Dog of Tokyo
    is the name of the 2009 documentary of Daido Moriyama made by director Kenjiro Fujii.  It is available on DVD at Amazon.

    Here is the trailer…

  • Nancy Schutt’s Dog Song II: “Better With You There” by Rich + Dan Reising

    How can a song be heartbreaking and upbeat? I have no idea but father and son country music team pulled it off when they wrote a song about Dan's dog entitled "Better With You There."  Then they discovered Nancy Schutt's terrific dog art music video "The Dog Song" and sent her a note to see if she was interested in their new song.  Serendipitously, Nancy was putting together a slide show of new paintings and was in need of music.  They put the images and music together and as you can see, everything clicked.  Brace yourself for beauty, tears, and laughter, just like life with a dog.  Enjoy…

    See more of Nancy Schutt's work or comisson a pet portrait at her website Good Dog Art.  Visit Dan Reising's myspace page here.

  • The Shiba Inu Puppy Cam is Back!

    Something soothing to ease us into the post Super Bowl work week.  Click on the arrow at the bottom of the window, NOT the one in the center of the screen…

    Via Ustream by way of Minnesota to Manhattan.