Show your pets some love this Valentine's Day by sending your favorite photos of them to the Cupid's Companions Photo Contest! Help MADE in Texas Assistance Dogs raise money to benefit our service dogs in-training by submitting photos of your pets and encouraging your friends and family to vote for the best ones. Nominations are now open. Submit a photo of your pet and tell us about them. There are three categories for photos –
Portrait,
Action, and
Attire.
- Portrait: Show us pictures of your pets looking their most lovable! These can be head shots, full body, or whatever preference you have so long as your pet is the star!
- Action: Whether your pet is flying through the air like Cupid's arrow, swimming across the Lagoon of Love, or galloping into the sunset with their one true love, we want to see them in motion!
- Attire: This category is for the most dapper dogs and the coolest cats. Submit photos of Fido in his finest or your Calico in her cutest for a chance to win bragging rights for your pet as the best dressed!
There will be two winning photos per category, with selection criteria for winners determined by Most Popular (votes based) and Best Photo (quality based and not dependent on votes). Voting for your favorites begins on February 6
th, 2015, and each vote is a $1 donation to MADE.
Although we can't name every photo Best Photo or Most Popular, every entrant is still a winner! The 52 photos with the most votes will each be featured on a card in an animal-themed deck of playing cards. Every entry into the contest will receive a deck of cards as a prize, regardless of the number of votes received.
View Our Prizes Here! Don’t have a favorite photo to submit? That’s okay, you can participate and support MADE by
browsing the photos of the submitted animals, finding your favorites, and voting for them! You can even
purchase a deck of cards featuring the most popular photos, no entry into the contest necessary!
Thank you for choosing to support MADE in Texas Assistance Dogs and have fun while doing it. We couldn’t raise and train service dogs to assist individuals with disabilities without the help of our community!