What Color is an Australian Labradoodle?
red
Plate 01A Red coat should be a solid red color. Nose will be black.
Apricot
Plate 02An apricot coat is a rich red tinted Gold color. Nose will be black.
Caramel
Plate 03A caramel coat is a rich solid gold color. Nose will be brown.
Cream
Plate 04A Cream coat should be a creamy color with a caramel or apricot tint. Nose can be black or brown. Cream dogs with brown noses are sometimes referred to as Caramel Cream.
Black
Plate 05A Black coat will be a solid black color. Nose will be black. White markings can be present.
Chocolate
Plate 06A Chocolate coat should be a rich dark brown color. Nose will be brown.
Café
Plate 07A Café coat is lighter than the chocolate coat and is more of a milk chocolate color. Nose will be Brown.
Lavender
Plate 08the Lavender coat has a smoky lavender chocolate color. Lavender dogs are born chocolate and will develop over the first 1-3 years of their lives. Nose will be brown.
Parchment
Plate 09the Parchment coat is a creamy cool toned beige/chocolate color. Parchment dogs are born a milk chocolate color and will develop over the first 1-3 years of their lives. Nose will be brown.
Parti
Plate 10a Parti coat is when at least 50% of the coat is white, with spots or patches of any other above solid colors. Nose can be black or brown depending on the colored part of the coat.
Roan
Plate 11A coat with Roaning is a darker color (can be any of the above solid colors) mixed in to white parts of the coat. Nose can be black or brown depending on the colored part of the coat. Roan portions of the coat may appear solid white early on and the darker colors may emerge with age.
Phantom
Plate 12A Coat with phantom markings has a solid base color (usually Chocolate or Black) with sharply defined markings of a second tan color appearing above each eye, on the sides of the muzzle, on the throat and forechest, or in a chin and forechest bowtie pattern as well as on all four legs and feet, and below the tail. Nose can be black or brown depending on the colored part of the coat.
Tri Color
Plate 13A Tri color coat has three colors. A base color (Usually chocolate or black) with markings in two additional colors (Usually tan and white). Similar to a Phantom. Nose can be black or brown depending on the colored part of the coat.
Tuxedo
Plate 14A coat with tuxedo markings is shown as a base color of any of the above solid colors with White markings clearly defined as a bib on the chest that can wrap around the neck. The belly, front and back legs and paws can also be white. Nose can be black or brown depending on the colored part of the coat.
Sable
Plate 15A sable coat has Black-tipped hairs on any of the above solid colors. Nose can be black or brown depending on the colored part of the coat.
On Stature
How Big is an Australian Labradoodle?
There is a range in weight for each height, depending on the build of each dog. Some are lighter on their feet and others are a little more solid. There are no definite outcomes on how each dog will develop of course, but most of our litters will be full-grown between 25-40 lbs. Height will most likely vary between mini and medium as most of our parent dogs are between the large end of the mini range to an average medium size.
Size depends on the combination of the genes that each dog inherits. Just like children born to the same parents, the weight and height of puppies born to the same parents can differ quite a bit.
The good news is that they are all AMAZING dogs, because Australian Labradoodle breeding has been very responsibly handled over multiple generations. There may be some degree of inability to predict the size with great accuracy but you won't be disappointed regardless!
If you are thinking about using the dog as a service animal whose service requires a specific height, we would encourage you to inquire further so that we can try to narrow down the expected height and weight for the specific litter you are considering.
In Summary
What is an Australian Labradoodle?
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.
- 01A soft, non-oily low or non-shedding coat
- 02A reliable flexible temperament
- 03A genetically inherited high probability for a long and happy life
- 04A loyal and affectionate personality
- 05Intelligence that is easy to train
- 06A genuinely happy, easy-going vibe
- 07Effortless, smooth motion and coordination
- 08Great looks that turn heads wherever they go!