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We Animals 2025 Holiday Prints

by | Nov 15, 2025

Your support is essential in helping We Animals expose the reality for animals in the human world.

From now until December 31st, when you donate $125* or more, We Animals will send you a beautiful 8″ X 10″ matte print of one of the animals featured in this year’s curated collection.

Give to We Animals this holiday season and receive a print!

We love and support sanctuaries, so a portion of the funds raised will go to the sanctuaries featured in the prints!

Our 2025 Holiday Prints

Adam at SAFE sanctuary - Quebec, Canada, 2021

This print is signed.

Adam, a young Jersey calf, nibbles on some hay on a cold winter day. As a male born on a dairy farm, Adam was considered to be a waste product, but he was so small that the owner of the farm took pity on him and asked SAFE to take him in. He has now grown into a big strong boy, with energy to spare. SAFE - Sanctuaire pour animaux de ferme de l'Estrie, Potton, Quebec, Canada, 2021. Victoria de Martigny / We Animals

Adam, a young Jersey calf, nibbles on some hay on a cold winter day. As a male born on a dairy farm, Adam was considered to be a waste product, but he was so small that the owner of the farm took pity on him and asked SAFE (Sanctuaire pour animaux de ferme de l’Estrie) to take him in.

When SAFE’s founder retired, Adam and the other cattle found a new home at GLO Farm Sanctuary in Ontario, Canada. GLO provides a forever home for farmed animals, ensuring their needs are not just met but exceeded.

Victoria de Martigny / We Animals

Božena at Skryty Azyl (Hidden Sanctuary) - Czechia, 2023

Bozena, a rescued resident pig at Farma Nadeje (Hope Farm) sanctuary gazes into the camera from a lush grass yard. Dobrovitov, Czechia, 2023. Lukas Vincour / We Animals

Božena, a rescued resident pig at Skryty Azyl (Hidden Sanctuary) gazes into the camera from a lush grass yard. While Skryty Azyl closed in early 2025, Božena is safe and well at Kraj Jinotaj sanctuary.

Despite its small size, Czechia is home to an estimated ten farmed animal sanctuaries. These sanctuaries provide refuge to animals typically raised for food production while challenging conventional perceptions of farmed animals and demonstrating how they thrive when allowed to live out their natural lives.

Lukas Vincour / We Animals

Grace at Farma Nadeje (Hope Farm) - Dobrovitov, Czechia, 2023

Grace, a reduced Highland cow poses on a hill at sunset at Farma Nadeje (Hope Farm) sanctuary. Dobrovitov, Czechia, 2023. Lukas Vincour / We Animals

Grace, a rescued Highland cow poses on a hill at sunset at Farma Nadeje (Hope Farm) sanctuary.

Farma Nadeje is a vegan farmed animal sanctuary. The sanctuary aims to educate people that farmed animals are fundamentally the same as companion animals, and experience the same degrees of love, joy, and pain.

Lukas Vincour / We Animals

Jackrabbit snacking - Alberta, Canada, 2024

This print is signed.

A white-tailed jackrabbit keeps a close eye on human activity while snacking on dandelion stems. Alberta, Canada, 2024. Jo-Anne McArthur / HSI Canada / We Animals
A white-tailed jackrabbit keeps a close eye on human activity while snacking on dandelion stems.

We Animals founder Jo-Anne McArthur captured this moment while on assignment in central Alberta, Canada to document horses in feedlots for the live export industry.

Jo-Anne McArthur / HSI Canada / We Animals

Kenny at Edgar's Mission Sanctuary - Victoria, Australia, 2013

This print is signed.

A rescued goat named Kenny on a toppled tree branch at Edgar's Mission Sanctuary for farmed animals. Australia, 2013. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals

A rescued goat named Kenny on a toppled tree branch at Edgar’s Mission Sanctuary for farmed animals.

Edgar’s Mission is a not for profit farmed animal sanctuary that seeks to create a humane and just world for all. Through education, outreach, advocacy, community enrichment and tours, the sanctuary encourages people to expand their circle of compassion to include all animals.

Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals

A rescued horse stands amid golden autumn leaves at Skydog Ranch and Sanctuary. Skydog provides refuge to about 300 rescued wild horses and burros in a 9,000-acre natural landscape. Many of these equines come directly from kill pens or auctions where they were hours away from slaughter in Mexico or Canada. Bend, Oregon, USA, 2024. PhotoAdvocacy / We Animals

Rescued horse at Skydog Ranch and Sanctuary - Oregon, USA, 2024

A rescued horse stands amid golden autumn leaves at Skydog Ranch and Sanctuary in Oregon.

The photographer who took this shot, Scott Wilson, remembers the moment fondly:

“When Skydog Sanctuary founder, Clare Staples, invited me to visit the 9,000-acre sanctuary last fall, the chance to photograph some of the 300 rescued wild horses amid Oregon’s oldest aspen stand was irresistible. Photographing horses in the wild is often more like sports photography than portraiture — you have to anticipate every move, react in split seconds, and forget about fine-tuning composition. But at Skydog, watching these rescued wild horses move more freely through their new home, I had the rare opportunity to slow down — to focus on light, texture, and personality. That’s when I captured Rebel — a powerful rescued mustang — framed in a cascade of golden leaves. His steady gaze, straight into the lens, was the perfect finishing touch, the icing on the autumnal cake. Rebel was born in federal holding and rescued alongside his mother, Fern, a striking pinto mare, after their removal from the South Steens range in Oregon. Both have called Skydog home since May 2021.”

PhotoAdvocacy / We Animals

Zelda at Pear Tree Farm Animal Sanctuary - England, UK, 2021

Zelda is a hen who was rescued by Pear Tree Farm. She was picked on by the other hens and now seeks attention and comfort from people. Here she is having a cuddle and you can see her feathers starting to come back. Pear Tree Farm Animal Sanctuary, Wells, Somerset, England, UK, 2021. James Gibson / We Animals

Pear Tree Farm Animal Sanctuary describes Zelda’s journey on their website: “She was terrified and bald when she arrived at the sanctuary. She trusted us very quickly, and hid behind us from other hens when she was scared. She grew in confidence, she grew her feathers, and now she is a brave, fluffy member of the main flock.”

Pear Tree was founded in 2018 when they welcomed three pigs who were destined for the slaughterhouse into their home. The sanctuary has since grown, welcoming more pigs, turkeys, sheep, goats, horses, and ex-laying hens.

James Gibson / We Animals

Can’t decide on just one?

  • For a gift of $225 or more, you can choose two
  • $350 or more, choose up to four!

After you make a gift, you will be redirected to a form where you can choose which print(s) you’d like.

And for a limited time, all donations up to $10,000 will be matched, meaning your gift will have DOUBLE the impact!

Thank you so much for your gift!

*U.S. donors who give $500 or more can receive a tax receipt through our fiscal sponsor. Please contact development@weanimals.org for instructions.

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