Bengals come in a wide variety of colors and patterns, just one of the many factors that makes them such beautiful creatures. Their wild and exotic look is thanks to their Asian Leopard Cat ancestors. They have horizontal markings of rosettes, marble, or a mix sometimes referred to as "sparble." Represented here are just a few of many combinations of colors, including brown, blue, charcoal, snow, solid, and silver, but not every combination is present on this chart — there's simply too many to fit them all!
Browns: Ground color can be all shades of brown. Brown to jet black markings. A black tip tail. Green or gold eyes.
Snow: (Lynx, Mink, Sepia) Lynx: A very light white cream color. Dark or light seal markings. Dark seal brown tail tip. Blue eyes. Always. Mink: Ivory, cream, light tan color. Various shades of seal mink to dark seal mink markings. Dark seal brown tail tip Blue-green or aqua eyes. Sepia: Ivory, cream, light tan color. Various shades of seal sepia to dark seal sepia markings. Dark seal brown tail tip Green or gold eyes.
Silver: Ground color vary from white to dark steel. Dark gray to jet black marking. A black tip tail. Green or gold eyes.
Charcoal: Ground color can be dark greyish/brownish or carbon colored. "Zorro" markings with white goggles around the eyes and a dark "charcoal mask."
Blue: Ground color is pale blue gray to slate blue gray. Markings are medium blue to darker blue. A dark gray tail tip. Green, gold or hazel eyes.
Black/Metalic: Black spots on a black ground color. No warm tones. Faint to ghost like markings. Green, gold, or hayzel eyes.
Brown/black:
B/B, B/b, or B/bl, and D/D or D/d
Blue:
B/B, B/b, or B/b1 and d/d
Red:
XO/XO or XO/Y, and D/D or D/d
Agouti/Solid:
A/A, A/a, or Apb/A
Charcoal:
Apb/Apb or Apb/a Solid: a/a
No restriction: C/C, C/cs, or C/cb
Snow:
Sepia: cb/cb
Mink: cs/cb
Lynx Point: cs/cs
Inhibitor:
Silver/Smoke: I/I or I/i
Normal: i/i
Spotted/Sparble:
TaM/TaM or TaM/Tab
Marbled: Tab/Tab
Short hair:
L/L or L/I
Long hair: I/I
Most all our bengals are SBT
This is a great example of what you are looking for in the structure of the bengal cat.