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Color Distinctions in French Bulldogs
French Bulldogs come in
a variety of colors and coat patterns. Here is what the AKC Standard has to say
about color:
"Acceptable colors
- All brindle, fawn, white, brindle and white, and any color except those which
constitute disqualification. All colors are acceptable with the exception of
solid black, mouse, liver, black and tan, black and white, and white with
black, which are disqualifications. Black means black without a trace of
brindle."
The FCI standard disallowed
fawn until the mid nineties. Color disqualifications under the current FCI
standard are "black and tan, mouse grey, brown".
All of this variety has
a drawback, however - confusion over just what name applies to each color or
color pattern.
In its most simple
forms, French Bulldog coat color can be simply described as fawn, with a
variety of possible marking patterns and dilutions possible. Fawn can range in
shade from deep red to cafe au lait to pale golden cream. The differences in
appearance from here are all due to variants in marking patterns, which range
from brindle - black stripes in varying degrees of repetition and thickness
overlying the fawn base coat, to pied - varying patches of brindle overlaying
fawn interspersed with white markings, to black masked fawn - fawn in differing
shades with a classic 'masking' pattern on the face and dorsal area of the
body. There are a myriad of variants of marking type, pattern, size and
placement possible within these parameters.
Here are a few examples
of common - and not so common - coat patterns and colors within French
Bulldogs. All terms should be taken objectively, as there is a great deal of
difference of opinion within the Frenchie community as to which term defines
which color.
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