The Art of Painting Flat-Faced Dogs: Pugs, Bulldogs, and Boston Terriers

Pugs, Bulldogs, and Boston Terriers share something beyond their flat faces: they're among the most expressive, personality-packed dogs we paint. Here's what makes each breed unique as a portrait subject — and the techniques our artists use to capture them.

By Bolapawzi Team
3 min read

Custom hand-painted portrait of a flat-faced dog — Pug, Bulldog, or Boston Terrier — showcasing the breed's expressive face and unique character, by Bolapawzi

Pugs, Bulldogs, and Boston Terriers share something beyond their flat faces: they are, without exception, some of the most expressive, personality-packed dogs we have the pleasure of painting.

They're also technically demanding. Here's what makes each breed unique as a portrait subject — and how our artists approach the challenge.

What All Three Breeds Have in Common

Brachycephalic (flat-faced) dogs present a specific set of artistic challenges that most portrait artists don't encounter with other breeds:

  • Compressed facial structure — the muzzle is foreshortened, which changes how light and shadow fall across the face
  • Prominent, expressive eyes — large, round, and full of emotion; they dominate the portrait and must be painted with exceptional care
  • Skin folds and wrinkles — each fold creates its own micro-shadow and highlight, requiring layered, patient brushwork
  • Enormous personality — these dogs have faces that communicate constantly, and capturing that expressiveness is the real goal

Pugs: The Ancient Clowns

Pugs are one of the oldest dog breeds in the world, and their faces show it — deeply wrinkled, endlessly expressive, and somehow simultaneously dignified and ridiculous. Painting a Pug well means getting the wrinkle depth right: too shallow and the face looks flat; too deep and they look like a raisin.

The key is building up layers of warm shadow tones gradually, letting each layer dry before adding the next. The result is a face with real depth — one that looks like you could reach out and touch those velvety folds.

Bulldogs: Quiet Dignity

English Bulldogs have a gravitas that Pugs don't — a kind of stoic, world-weary dignity that makes them surprisingly moving portrait subjects. Their underbite, their heavy jowls, the way they seem to be perpetually contemplating something important — these are the details that make a Bulldog portrait unforgettable.

Our artists pay particular attention to the jowl area, where the skin folds create complex overlapping shadows. Getting this right is what separates a portrait that looks like a Bulldog from one that looks like your Bulldog.

Boston Terriers: The Gentlemen

Boston Terriers are the most refined of the three — sleek, tuxedo-patterned, with large round eyes that give them a permanently alert, slightly startled expression. Their black-and-white coloring is both a gift and a challenge: the contrast is striking, but painting it requires careful attention to where the white fur picks up reflected color from the environment.

Boston Terrier portraits often have a graphic quality — bold, clean, and elegant. They suit both classic and modern interior styles beautifully.

Tips for the Perfect Reference Photo

  • Shoot at eye level — looking down at flat-faced dogs flattens their already-compressed features further
  • Use natural, diffused light — harsh flash creates unflattering shadows in the wrinkles
  • Capture their signature expression — the Pug's quizzical tilt, the Bulldog's stoic gaze, the Boston's alert stare
  • Don't over-edit the photo — skin texture and wrinkle detail are essential reference information for our artists

Commission Your Flat-Faced Dog's Portrait

Every portrait is 100% hand-painted from your favorite photo. Preview before shipping. Unlimited revisions. Starting at $59.

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