~Keicoe fairies~ Species sheet 2
(I accidentally called both striped patterns simply "stripes". The common one should be tiger stripes, and the rare one should be bar stripes.)
More info:
✸ Keicoe fairies all share the same nose and paw pad shapes. The nose and center pad are heart shaped, with small oval pads on each of their four fingers and toes.
✸ Fairies often have a near-white or black base coat with colored markings, though this isn't always the case.
✸ Most fairies have a base coat and three to five additional colors. However, fairies who are entirely one color do occur on an extremely rare basis. When this occurs, their body usually has two or three shades of that color, their skin and fur being slightly different.
✸ While rare, keicoe fairies do occur who have no markings beyond differently colored skin, coat, mane and eyes.
✸ The signal spots on a keicoe fairy are used mostly to communicate with one another. Each fairy has two spots, which can be illuminated or dimmed at will. They use both to communicate different things, their left and right (or top and bottom) spots meaning different things in different contexts.
✸ Fairies can tell from a long distance which spot is left and which is right, even if the other fairy is a complete stranger. The reason for this is unclear, and upon being asked, most fairies will just say they don't know how they do it. Some who elaborate say that it's something in the "way the light is", though they fail to be able to describe what.
✸ When disguised, a fairy's signal lights can be seen even though the body part that the lights are on may not be visible. The lights translate to whatever body parts the disguise has, though in the case of things like tails on tailless disguises, antennae and wings, the spots appear where they would be if the fairy were the size of their disguise.
✸ It can often be hard to tell what kind of body mark field a keicoe fairy has, because they often have marks that only fill part of the field. For example, a fairy with a full body mark field can have markings that only cover its hips and shoulders, so could be mistaken for having a hips field instead. Typically, the field doesn't really have much impact on the fairy's markings, save for solid, bar-striped and harlequin patterns, because the markings that are scattered don't usually cover the entire area.
✸ The face is generally a free-for-all in terms of where markings are placed.
✸ Patterns can appear on the skin (antennae, tail and wings) as well as on the fur.
✸ Light underbelly, muzzle and inner ears are typically the same in all fairies, however, different muzzle patches occur, and some fairies may not have one (or any) of these light areas. They are usually a slightly lighter tone of the main coat color, but can be drastically lighter as well.
✸ The confetti, flora and star patterns can vary from fairy to fairy, i.e. One confetti fairy only having dots and hearts and another having triangles, squares and circles, or one flora fairy's markings being rose-themed and another's being hibiscus-themed.
✸ Confetti patterns can incorporate any simple shape, and any number of shapes, though fairies with six or more different kinds of shape are rare.
✸ Flora patterns are commonly based on flowers in the local area, be they native or introduced. Flowers can be large or small (or vines/leaves instead of flowers) and the size is only limited by the largest area that a single flower can cover according to their body mark field.
More info:
✸ Keicoe fairies all share the same nose and paw pad shapes. The nose and center pad are heart shaped, with small oval pads on each of their four fingers and toes.
✸ Fairies often have a near-white or black base coat with colored markings, though this isn't always the case.
✸ Most fairies have a base coat and three to five additional colors. However, fairies who are entirely one color do occur on an extremely rare basis. When this occurs, their body usually has two or three shades of that color, their skin and fur being slightly different.
✸ While rare, keicoe fairies do occur who have no markings beyond differently colored skin, coat, mane and eyes.
✸ The signal spots on a keicoe fairy are used mostly to communicate with one another. Each fairy has two spots, which can be illuminated or dimmed at will. They use both to communicate different things, their left and right (or top and bottom) spots meaning different things in different contexts.
✸ Fairies can tell from a long distance which spot is left and which is right, even if the other fairy is a complete stranger. The reason for this is unclear, and upon being asked, most fairies will just say they don't know how they do it. Some who elaborate say that it's something in the "way the light is", though they fail to be able to describe what.
✸ When disguised, a fairy's signal lights can be seen even though the body part that the lights are on may not be visible. The lights translate to whatever body parts the disguise has, though in the case of things like tails on tailless disguises, antennae and wings, the spots appear where they would be if the fairy were the size of their disguise.
✸ It can often be hard to tell what kind of body mark field a keicoe fairy has, because they often have marks that only fill part of the field. For example, a fairy with a full body mark field can have markings that only cover its hips and shoulders, so could be mistaken for having a hips field instead. Typically, the field doesn't really have much impact on the fairy's markings, save for solid, bar-striped and harlequin patterns, because the markings that are scattered don't usually cover the entire area.
✸ The face is generally a free-for-all in terms of where markings are placed.
✸ Patterns can appear on the skin (antennae, tail and wings) as well as on the fur.
✸ Light underbelly, muzzle and inner ears are typically the same in all fairies, however, different muzzle patches occur, and some fairies may not have one (or any) of these light areas. They are usually a slightly lighter tone of the main coat color, but can be drastically lighter as well.
✸ The confetti, flora and star patterns can vary from fairy to fairy, i.e. One confetti fairy only having dots and hearts and another having triangles, squares and circles, or one flora fairy's markings being rose-themed and another's being hibiscus-themed.
✸ Confetti patterns can incorporate any simple shape, and any number of shapes, though fairies with six or more different kinds of shape are rare.
✸ Flora patterns are commonly based on flowers in the local area, be they native or introduced. Flowers can be large or small (or vines/leaves instead of flowers) and the size is only limited by the largest area that a single flower can cover according to their body mark field.
Category All / Miscellaneous
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 700 x 1700px
File Size 535.4 kB
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