the art

of the hunt

Bird Dog + Hunting Dog Photography Workshop

A three-day immersive field workshop for photographers who want to create authentic hunting dog imagery from the inside out.

Not This
  • Guessing what the dog is doing
  • Reacting after the moment breaks
  • Getting in the way & disrupting the day
  • Hoping for images that look good but actually feel inauthentic
This
  • How to anticipate moments before they happen
  • How to read working dog body language — the real point vs. the false one
  • How to move safely alongside hunters and handlers
  • How to work in less than perfect lighting conditions
  • How to recognize the stories most photographers miss
What This Workshop Is

Learn to see
the Hunt.

For photographers who already know how to use their camera, and are ready to learn how to move confidently in the hunting world, read what's actually happening in the field, and photograph bird dogs in a way that honors the hunt, relationship, and the dog.

The Core Teaching

Six things to scan
before you press the shutter.

Most photographers are looking for action. I'm looking for something else. Over the last six years, I've developed a framework that helps me recognize the moments that matter before they happen. Whether I'm photographing a field trial in Virginia, a grouse hunt in Maine, or gamekeepers in Scotland, these are the six things I'm constantly evaluating. They're what turn a record shot into a story.

01

Attention

02

Relationship

03

Purpose

04

Context

05

Evidence

06

Emotion

A woman with brown hair, sunglasses, and an orange cap hiking with a brown and white dog on her shoulder in a grassy field during the daytime.
Why This Exists

The resource I wish
I'd had.

I've been doing this for six years. When I started, there was nothing like this.

No workshop that took the hunting world seriously. No resource that covered the safety, the etiquette, the nuance, or the reality that if you don't live this life, it's surprisingly easy to get it wrong.

And in a world built on relationships and trust, getting it wrong can mean not getting invited back.

I learned by being in it. By asking questions and making mistakes nobody warned me about. By spending countless hours around handlers, trainers, guides, and bird dogs, figuring it out, one hunt at a time.

Over the last few years, I've noticed more photographers finding their way into hunting dog photography, and I think that's a good thing. But the learning curve is real.

Understanding your camera is one thing. Understanding how to move safely with hunters, how to work around firearms, how to read a dog before the action happens, and how to photograph this world in a way that feels authentic to the people who live it. . . well, that's something else entirely.

This workshop is the resource I wish I'd had when I was starting out. My goal is simple: help you skip some of the mistakes I made, shorten the learning curve, and give you a foundation that took me years to build on my own.

A black dog running through a muddy field with a stick in its mouth, surrounded by tall grasses and blurred trees in the background.

Street Cred 


published in: Project Upland, Hunting Dog Confidential, Quail Forever, Pheasants Forever, (Gray’s Sporting Journal, forthcoming)

2x Hair of the Dog Academy Summit instructor | 5 photography-specific podcast appearances

Co-instructor of Woofventures Retreats | Dog photography retreats in Scotland

PPA International Print Competition: Gold + Silver | VA PPA Vanguard + Court of Honor Awards

Upland + waterfowl hunter | bird dog mom

The Curriculum

What you'll
walk away with.

Understanding the Hunt
  • Gundog roles: pointers, flushers, and retrievers
  • Hunting terminology and field etiquette
  • Safety around firearms, hunters, and working dogs
  • How to position yourself without disrupting the hunt
Learning to See the Story
  • Reading bird dog body language
  • Anticipating moments before they happen
  • Understanding handler and dog communication
  • Recognizing the moments most photographers miss
In-Field Photography
  • Photographing pointers, flushers, and retrievers
  • Capturing action and emotion
  • Building stronger compositions
  • Creating a complete visual narrative
Image Review & Editing
  • Story-driven image selection
  • Editing for authentic sporting imagery
  • Group critique and feedback
  • Private, post-workshop portfolio review Zoom call, after your first solo hunt session.

Kind words 


From past students

”I first learned from Kristen at Woofventures Retreats in Scotland. Her teaching methods, friendly personality and patience while teaching photographers of all experience levels was truly appreciated. I clicked so well with her that I decided to work with her one-on-one on my business techniques and photography. Kristen has been an exceptional educator, life coach, and now friend. Whenever I’m feeling stuck in an aspect of my business or need a little push to move forward, she’s there to help me. I can’t recommend learning from Kristen more.”    

— Megan Purtell Photography

”Kristen is a very intentional photographer who places great value on having a process that she has refined over time. This makes for a productive, fun, and relaxed experience from start to finish. She's super patient and encouraging, even when I was acting like a total newb!

I highly recommend learning from her if you want to hone your photography skills.”    

— Charlotte Detienne Photography

The Approach

You'll leave with your images,
not mine.

There could be a version of this workshop where everyone walks away with the same shot. The same framing, same edit, same light. You can tell exactly whose workshop it came from because every image looks almost identical.

That's not what this is.

My job isn't to create Kristen clones. It's to help you develop your own vision. We'll spend three days in the field together, and I'll teach you to read the hunt, anticipate the moment, and build images that hold up; but how you see it, how you frame it, what you choose to include or leave out, that stays yours.

I’m going to teach you how to take great images of bird dogs doing their job in the field. You’re going to walk away with strong work, but also images that still feel true to you as an artist. My goal is for you to leave with a body of work that feels like you shot it.
Because you did.

The Experience

How the experience
works.

Day One

Observation & Understanding

Learn the language of bird dogs, field etiquette, safety, and how to recognize the moments before they happen.

Day Two

Guided Field Photography

Work alongside pointers, flushers, and retrievers while receiving real-time instruction in the field.

Day Three

Storytelling & Execution

Put everything together to create a complete visual story from the hunt.

Two hunters walking through a forest with their dogs, wearing orange safety gear, and carrying firearms.

— LIMITED TO 4 STUDENTS —

October 2026

New Kent, Virginia

Small group. One instructor. Lodging + some meals included. Real dogs, real hunts, real work. Join the waitlist, and you'll hear about dates, location, and early bird(dog) pricing before anyone else.