www.dogandkennel.com  

    
    Subscribe Now
    Back Issues
    News & Articles
    Dog Breeds
    Dog Breeders
    Reader Stories
    Canine Links
    
Web Advertising
    
Print Advertising
    Contact Us
    Message Board
 
Free Trial Issue!

Click here to get your free trial issue subscription of
Dog & Kennel
Magazine!

Visit Pet Publishing's other pet related sites

www.catsandkittens.com
www.birdtimes.com


 

 

Lucy's Storybook Life
by Andrew Waters

Lucy leads a storybook life. So far she has joined the rodeo, been to outer space and saved the world - not bad for a 3-year-old Chihuahua.
"Lucy is very feisty," says Debbie D'Andrea of her adventurous dog, who hasn't actually been in a spaceship or ridden a rodeo bull but does star in a series of children's books in which she appears to do so. D'Andrea is the owner of Playhouse Publishing, a children's book publisher in Akron, Ohio. Two years ago, she had the idea of having Lucy star in her own series of children's adventures. "Because I don't have any more babies in my house, I started dressing Lucy up in clothes as a joke," recalls the mother of two and former school psychologist. "Everyone thought it was so funny that we started taking pictures of her. Then we thought, 'Oh my gosh, wouldn't this be cute if we incorporated some of these pictures into a story about a little dog and her friends.'"

The idea sprung from the company's other successful book series. D'Andrea's first line of children's books were interactive "Picture Me" books, featuring space to slip a child's photograph into various costumes and settings, so the child actually "starred" in the book. "Then we started doing dress-up books with babies, where we dressed babies in costumes, took their pictures and put them in the stories," D'Andrea recalls. "That's when we really started getting into photography."

To create the books, published under the series title "Little Lucy and Friends," D'Andrea and her staff first come up with a story concept that is appropriate for their target audience of children ages 4 to 8. They then hire freelance writers, illustrators and costume designers to bring Lucy's adventures to life. The costumed dogs are photographed digitally, the pictures are cropped and all the elements - illustrations, photographs, clay models and text - are assembled on the computer using a layered process that gives added dimension and depth. "The reason all of our books look very interesting and very real - aside from the fact that the characters are real dogs dressed in real clothes - is because all of the images that are used for the background are three dimensional," D'Andrea explains.

Although putting the books together requires the hard work of many talented people and dogs, the secret ingredient is bologna. "Lucy will do anything you want her to do for bologna," she says. "She'll look anywhere you want her to look, she'll even dance. When we want her to look really excited we'll put another dog with her so there's competition for the bologna."

Bologna inspires Lucy's work, but the dog also possesses natural modeling talent. "What makes her so good, as far as photographing for these books, is her little black mouth," says D'Andrea of her small, doe-eyed Chihuahua. "It almost looks like she's smiling. She also has eyebrows, which is another human-like characteristic that makes her face very expressive. When she moves her eyebrows up and down she makes all different kinds of facial expressions."

No prima donna, Lucy gets along well with her co-stars, which include a housemate and fellow Chihuahua named Rico, who plays Lucy's pal Verne. A Chinese crested plays Mrs. Bowser, the teacher. A Yorkshire terrier, another Chihuahua and a toy poodle round out the cast of Lucy's adventurous schoolmates. "Lucy isn't temperamental at all," says D'Andrea of her featured star. "She just gets up there and does her job."

D'Andrea shares a similar work ethic with her pet/star. A native of northern Virginia, D'Andrea moved to Akron to be closer to her husband's family. She began publishing children's books 13 years ago as a way to work and stay home with her young children. Her innovative "Picture Me" books found a profitable niche in the photography market, allowing her to build her company. Playhouse Publishing now has 12 full-time employees and several popular lines of children's books available in book and photography retailers throughout the country.

For More Information

To learn more about the adventures of Lucy and her storybook friends, visit her Web site at http://www.littlelucyandfriends.com

 

Copyright © 2000 Pet Publishing Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.