Well, I suppose I could start with the hen in my avatar. She's about the worst example of a Dominique as you're likely to find, haha! But she was my first Dominique, and she was the one who introduced us to the breed and taught us about some of the wonderful but more intangible traits of the breed, so I'll share her with you and point out her faults, in terms of the SOP.
She had a huge cushion, and a lot of fluff on her butt. She had a pretty severely pinched tail, and a wedge-shaped comb. There's a lot of smuttiness to her barring, it isn't very clean. She had a lot of black on her beak and legs (I know some is acceptable, but she had quite a bit), and she had feather stubs between her toes. Her body was narrow and her back didn't slope down toward the tail like it should. I know it was cold in this photo, as you can see from the frost on the grass, but she always looked like a little puff ball.
She was the correct weight for a Dominique hen, and she laid medium to large eggs right through the winter. She was docile but alert, intelligent (for a chicken), a good forager, and ranked high in the peck order considering she was part of my first mixed flock of standard breeds and therefore the smallest of all of them. She had nice deep red eyes. She was just a hatchery bird. I talk about her in the past tense because she just died last week, and we miss her quite a bit. She became very much a pet bird, but she inspired our love for the breed and sent us out to acquire some better stock to work with and learn.

You can see the severely pinched tail in this photo, as well as a lump on her abdomen that eventually killed her. She had some sort of neoplasm there, I did a rudimentary necropsy when she died and she was riddled with little tumor nodules all over her intestines and oviduct. So genetically speaking, she was a dead end. I guess fortunately for her, we had her before we even started thinking about breeding! She would have no place in a proper breeding program.

Anyway, I will now find some of my photos of slightly better examples of Dominiques, and talk more about my goals, as suggested.
She had a huge cushion, and a lot of fluff on her butt. She had a pretty severely pinched tail, and a wedge-shaped comb. There's a lot of smuttiness to her barring, it isn't very clean. She had a lot of black on her beak and legs (I know some is acceptable, but she had quite a bit), and she had feather stubs between her toes. Her body was narrow and her back didn't slope down toward the tail like it should. I know it was cold in this photo, as you can see from the frost on the grass, but she always looked like a little puff ball.
She was the correct weight for a Dominique hen, and she laid medium to large eggs right through the winter. She was docile but alert, intelligent (for a chicken), a good forager, and ranked high in the peck order considering she was part of my first mixed flock of standard breeds and therefore the smallest of all of them. She had nice deep red eyes. She was just a hatchery bird. I talk about her in the past tense because she just died last week, and we miss her quite a bit. She became very much a pet bird, but she inspired our love for the breed and sent us out to acquire some better stock to work with and learn.
You can see the severely pinched tail in this photo, as well as a lump on her abdomen that eventually killed her. She had some sort of neoplasm there, I did a rudimentary necropsy when she died and she was riddled with little tumor nodules all over her intestines and oviduct. So genetically speaking, she was a dead end. I guess fortunately for her, we had her before we even started thinking about breeding! She would have no place in a proper breeding program.
Anyway, I will now find some of my photos of slightly better examples of Dominiques, and talk more about my goals, as suggested.