Marking Type: Normal Marking
Rarity: Common
Pangare is a natural symmetrical marking that lightens the underside of the Rukaan. Pangare is a coat trait found in some horses that features pale hair around the eyes and muzzle and underside of the body. Animals with the pangare trait are sometimes called "mealy".
Pangare normally focuses on the belly, flank, lower legs, throat and muzzle.
Above are the minimum ranges for this marking. Pangare must cover at least the entirety of either one of the minimum ranges shown above.
Shown above is the maximum range and maximum extent for the marking. Marking can cover this entire range.
Typical Expressions of Pangare
Soft Gradient Pangare Edge
Subtle Fur Texture Pangare Edge
Pangare should be a soft gradient marking with subtle fur texture allowed. It should never be hard-edged or resemble Splash Accents.
Pangare is always slightly lighter than what it sits over and may take on slightly warm tones. However, it should never be pure white on a saturated/dark base or starkly colored or more saturated than the base coat.
Please note that layer effects (such as screen, soft light, overlay, etc) in image editing software may change the saturation, hue or color of your markings. If you are using non-standard layers, please check your saturation and hue before submitting to make sure they are consistent with the design guides.
This marking has no effect on skin color. Use a normal, undiluted flesh color.
Eye color is not affected by this gene.
Effect on Metal and Gemstone elements: None
Effect on Ancient element: None
Pangare may flow with the direction of the fur on coat types with longer hair.
Pangare on the longer hairs of a Cloaked Rukaan.
Color Modifiers
Blue can give pangare a blue color
Wine can give pangare a lilac purple color
Champagne can give pangare a golden-cream color
Olive can give pangare a mossy green color
Grey will affect all lightening and darkening markings and desaturate/lighten them to the same extent that it desaturates/lightens the base coat. Lightening markings can be obscured by grey if the grey is white or nearly white. They do not have to be visible on very pale grey coats.
Tint can change the color of this marking to a color from any color palette in the species
White Markings go over this marking. All other markings can go over or under.
Soft-edged light markings can blend together. Pangare will often blend together with other soft-edged lightening genes such as Frosting, Snowline, Skunk or Roan.
Pangare is based on the pangare/mealy marking in horses, most commonly found in draft and pony breeds.