A marking that lightens the underbelly of your lirse.
Design Notes:
It must be a lighter shade of the base coat or white.
It must have a gradient edge.
It may be up to two colors, but they must blend together. Pangare must not be so saturated that it looks unnatural relative to the lirse's base coat. Saturation should not stray any further than 40 on the saturation scale from the base coat.
For inspiration, look to pangare horses and przewalski's horses, big cats, shiba inus and akita inus, birds such as hawks and waxwings, and even some aquatic animals like sharks and seals.
The maximum range for Pangare is marked in red. At minimum, Pangare must be distinguishable.
CORRECT - This Pangare is two-toned (white and cream), blended, and doesn't appear too saturated relative to the base coat.
INCORRECT - This Pangare is too saturated and looks unnatural.
INCORRECT - This Pangare has an appropriate saturation value. However, hard edges are present on the face. (This would be correct if the lirse had Dipped)
CORRECT - Pangare can be broken up into separate sections. It may also have some patterning to the edge, provided it's not extreme or complex)
INCORRECT - This Pangare displays holes. (This would be correct if the lirse had Spotting; see below)
When a lirse has both Pangare and Spotting, the Pangare can have soft- or gradient-edged holes. The size and shape of these holes are bound to the same restrictions as Spotting.