Hover over each photo below to learn more.
This coat will be a light creamy coloring with apricot/gold tinting. The nose can be brown or black. Caramel Cream is another name for cream dogs with brown or chestnut noses.
The apricot color can range from rich gold to a deep red with even coloring throughout the body. The color of the nose will be black.
A red Australian Labradoodle will be a deep, rich shade of red with a black nose.
This coat will be a solid black color and the pigment in the nose will also be black.
Chocolate should have a deep, dark brown color. Real chocolates are nearly black at birth. The color of the nose pigment should be brown, matching the color of the coat.
Café ranges from a milk chocolate color to silver-beige. The color of the nose will be brown, matching the color of the coat.
The lavender coat has a distinct smoky lavender chocolate color. The color of the nose will be brown, matching the color of the coat. Dogs that are even lighter in color may be considered parchment.
Partis are at least fifty percent white, with spots or patches of color. The color of the spots can be any of the shades listed above. (Here we are showing a Chocolate parti). Nose pigment will match the solid color requirements listed above.
Roan is similar to the Parti coat but with colored hairs mixed into the white portions of the coat. The colored portions of the coat can be any of the coat colors listed above. The nose will be either brown or black.
Phantoms have a solid base color with distinct markings of a second color on the sides of the muzzle, over each eye, on the throat and chest, or in a bowtie pattern on the chin and chest, on all four legs and feet, and beneath the tail. A phantom can also present with its entire face colored in the second color, or one without distinct face markings is accepted. Any combination of colors can be expected. Should be less than 50% white, with any other solid color making up the remaining percentage. Nose can be either brown or black.
Phantoms have a solid base color with distinct markings of a second color on the sides of the muzzle, over each eye, on the throat and chest, or in a bowtie pattern on the chin and chest, on all four legs and feet, and beneath the tail. A phantom can also present with its entire face colored in the second color, or one without distinct face markings is accepted. Any combination of colors can be expected. Should be less than 50% white, with any other solid color making up the remaining percentage. Nose can be either brown or black.
Sables’ coats are identified by black-tipped hairs on a solid-colored coat. There is no specific pattern or placement for these hairs.
The Australian Labradoodle, often certified for service and therapy work, is not to be confused with the Aussie-Doodle, Labradoodle, or any other more recently bred and named combination. Named in the country of Australia, where it originated over 30 years ago, the breed was originally developed in pursuit of an allergy-friendly service dog.
Through the careful infusion of not two, but six breeds, each offering specific highly valued inherited traits, the original dream-dogs were born. This resulted in the inheritance of highly coveted traits that were demonstrated in other breeds but rarely found together in one dog.
After multiple generations of breeding, today’s responsibly bred Australian Labradoodle has
While most doodle mixes have been bred for a comparatively short period of time, this long list of desirable traits has been responsibly maintained for multiple generations in the Australian Labradoodle.
This is not your standard doodle-mix, this is the esteemed Multi-Generational Australian Labradoodle. This is a breed that reliably allows owners to expect and trust that their loyal family member will be admired by all.
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