Home
Cat Art
Horse Art
Dog Art
Big Cat Art
Contact Us
Pets Arts Blog
Art Links
Subject Study
About Me
Drawing Techniques
Sculpture Artists
Art Lessons
Painting Techniques
Free Articles
Art Books



Physical aspects of the Horse




Physical aspects of the horse:

The horse comes in various sizes, though they all come the same.



Withers

the highest point of the shoulder seen best with horse standing square and head slightly lowered. The tops of the two shoulder blades and the space between them define the withers.

mane and forelock

long and relatively coarse hair growing from the dorsal ridge of the neck, lying on either the left or right side of the neck, and the continuation of that hair on the top of the head, where it generally hangs forward. (See illustration.)

Flank : Where the hind legs and the stomach of the horse meet.

Pastern: The connection between the coronet and the fetlock.

Fetlock: Resembles the ankle of the horse.

Coronet: The part of the hoof that connects the hoof to the pastern.

Cannon: Resembles the shin of the horse.

Muzzle: he chin, mouth, and nostrils make up the muzzle on the horse's face.

Crest: he point on the neck where the mane grows out of.

Poll: the portion of the horse's neck right behind the ears.

Hock: Hindlimb equivalent to the Heel, the main joint on the hind leg.

Stifle: corresponds to the elbow of a horse, except on the hind limb.

Gaskin: also known as the "second thigh," the large muscle on the hind leg, just above the hock, below the stifle.

Jowl: he cheek bone under the horses ear on both sides.

Chestnut: on the inside of every leg.



Horse coat colors and markings

Horses exhibit a diverse array of coat colors and distinctive markings, and a specialized vocabulary has evolved to describe them. In fact, one will often refer to a horse in the field by his or her coat color rather than by breed or by gender. Coat colors include:

Appaloosa - a breed of horse with spots, any color mixed with white. There are different patterns: blanket- white blanket that typically starts around or behind withers with dark spots mostly over the hips, snowflake - solid with white spots over hips, and leopard - which is white with dark spots over all the coat. A true Appaloosa is actually a breed, not a color.

Bay - From light brown to very dark brown with black mane and tail with black points. Three types - Dark bay, blood bay, light bay and just bay.

Black - There are two types of black, fading black and jet black. Ordinary black horses will fade to a rusty brownish color if the horse is exposed to sunlight on a regular basis. Jet black is a blue-black shade that is fadeproof. Black foals are usually born a mousy grey color. As their foal coat begins to shed out, their black color will show through, but jet black foals are born jet black. Usually for a horse to be considered black it must be completely black with no brown at all, only white markings.

Brown - A bay without any black points.

Buckskin - A bay horse with a gene that 'dilutes' the coat colour to a yellow, cream, or gold while keeping the black points (mane, tail, ears, legs).

Chestnut - - A reddish body color with no black.

Cremello - A chestnut horse with two dilute genes that washes out almost all colour. Often called pseudo albinos, they have blue eyes. There are no true albino horses.

Dun - Yellowish brown with a dorsal stripe along the back and occasionally zebra stripings on the legs.

Fleabitten - - refers to usually red hairs flecked in the coat of a gray horse.

Grey - - A horse with black skin and clear hairs. Gray horses can be born any color, and eventually most will turn gray or white with age. If you would define the horse as white it is still grey unless it is albino. Some gray horses that are very light must wear sunscreen.

Grulla - - A black horse with a dun gene. It is often a grayish/silver colored horse with dark dun factors.

Pinto - - a multi-colored horse with large patches of brown, white,and/or black and white. Piebald is black and white, while Skewbald is white and brown. Specific patterns such as tobiano, overo, and tovero refer to the orientation of white on the body.

Paint - - In 1962, the American Paint Horse Association began to recognize pinto horses with known Quarter Horse and/or Thoroughbred bloodlines as a separate breed. Today, Paint horses are the world's fifth most popular breed.

Palomino - -chesnut horse that has one cream dilute gene that turns the horse to a golden, yellow, or tan shade with a flaxen (white) mane and tail. Often cited as being a color "within three shades of a newly minted coin", palominos actually come in all shades from extremely light, to deep chocolate.

Perlino - Exactly like a cremello but a bay horse with two dilute genes.

Roan - - a color pattern that causes white hairs to be sprinkled over the horse's body color. Red roans are chesnut and white hairs, blue roans are black/bay with white hairs. Roan can happen on any body color; for example, there are palomino roans and dun roans. Roans are distinguishable from greys because roans typically do not change colour in their lifetimes, unlike gray that gradually gets lighter as a horse ages. Roans also have solid colored heads that do not lighten.

Sorrel - a light brown coat with a flaxen mane and tail.

Splash - a genetically controlled horse coat variation.

Tobiano - a genetic trait among horses which produces a characteristic white pattern in the coat.

White - Any non-albino white horse is called a gray, even though they appear white. All white, may be the result of overlapping pinto, appaloosa, or sabino markings. Rarely there are true white horses born and are documented to have a dominant white gene. These horses have normal eye colour, and they stay white for life.

Markings include:

On the face:

  • Star
  • Snip
  • Stripe
  • Blaze
  • White Face (sometimes called Bald Face)

    On the legs:

  • Coronet
  • Pastern
  • Sock
  • Stocking




  • Return from: Physical aspects of the Horse to Horse Art











    footer for Physical aspects of the Horse page