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I thought her face looked different, maybe slimmer than my other cat, but wasn’t sure. She had a very bad eye infection when I adopted her so her eyes are sensitive to light so its hard to take a decent picture of her eyes.She is gorgeous her eyes still look blue to me but I’ll take your word for it. That can come from the white on her face. I would call her a dsh tabby bi-color probably brown tabby. her face and ears look oriental to me. Maybe she has pointed too.
Thank youTo me she looks like very diluted calico with tabby markings. She's very beautiful!
Agree. Tortie lynx point, and white. The white covering the usual face masque...She is a tortie lynx point. Basically a lynx point with usually cream markings, the brown is the colorpoint color. Thats why she has blue eyes
Is there a lot like her? I love her coloring but I’ve never in my life seen coloring like hersAgree. Tortie lynx point, and white. The white covering the usual face masque...
Lynx here means tabby. Which btw makes her body darker than usually with points.
Try to google.Is there a lot like her? I love her coloring but I’ve never in my life seen coloring like hers
Thank you, I’ll have to get more familiar with coloring and patternsTry to google.
But its not very apparent she is a point, so some of these lynx torbie points arent never identfied. (in fact, some of the lyns points arent identified, being heavily looking tabbies).
Also, the self torbie (ie tabby and tortie) is often difficult to analyse properly. Its by itself sometimes a give away.
You're saying lynx point means there's less contrast between the body and points than solid pointed cats? Do you have sources for that? I've never heard of that. It's either temperature or genes (mink, sepia) that affect the amount of contrast in the body.Agree. Tortie lynx point, and white. The white covering the usual face masque...
Lynx here means tabby. Which btw makes her body darker than usually with points.
Its the practical observation. To put it simply, the tabby pattern is by itself coloring / darkening the otherwise typical "whitish" body of points... In cats with double tabby gene its even sometimes difficult to see its a point...You're saying lynx point means there's less contrast between the body and points than solid pointed cats? Do you have sources for that? I've never heard of that. It's either temperature or genes (mink, sepia) that affect the amount of contrast in the body.