Lionhead Working Standard
Varieties: BLACK, BLUE, BLUE POINT, BLUE TORTOISE, CHESTNUT AGOUTI, CHINCHILLA,
CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE AGOUTI,
CHOCOLATE TORTOISE, LILAC, OPAL, ORANGE, OTTER, POINTED WHITE, RUBY EYED WHITE,
SABLE POINT,
SABLE MARTEN, SEAL, SIAMESE SABLE, SMOKE PEARL, SQUIRREL, TORTOISE
SCHEDULE OF POINTS
GENERAL TYPE.......................................................................................................40
Body..........................................................25
Head..........................................................10
Ears............................................................5
FUR...........................................................................................................................45
Mane...........................................................30
Coat............................................................15
COLOR............................................................................................10
CONDITION.....................................................................................5TOTAL....................................................................100
SHOWROOM CLASSES & WEIGHTS
Senior Buck & Does - 6 months of age and over, not over 3-3/4 pounds. Ideal weight 3-1/2 pounds.
Junior Bucks & Does- Under 6 months of age, not over 3-1/4 pounds. Minimum
weight 1 5/8 pounds.
NOTE: Juniors which exceed maximum weight limits
may be shown in higher age classifications.
No animal may be shown in a lower
age classification than its true age.
GENERAL
TYPE
Body- Points 25: The body is to be short, compact and well rounded. The shoulders and chest are to be broad and well filled, with broad shoulders matching hindquarters. The depth at the shoulders should round back to broad, deep, and well rounded hindquarters. The lower hips should be well filled. They should have a high head mount. Legs should be of medium length and medium bone, relative to the size of the animal. Stance is to be high enough to show full chest and mane.
PLEASE NOTE - THIS IS A POSED BREED AND IS NOT SHOWN WITH IT'S HEAD ON THE TABLE
Faults- Long, narrow body; flatness over shoulders or hips; chopped off or undercut hindquarters; any specimen that shows raciness.
HEAD
- Points 10: The head should be bold, with good width between the eyes.
The muzzle should be well filled. The head should be attached to the body with
a high head mount and no visible neck. There should be a slight roundness between
the eyes, but the head is not to be round from all directions. Eyes should be
bright
and
bold. Eye color to be as described in the individual variety.
Faults- A long, narrow head; pointed or narrow muzzle, low headset.
EARS- Points 5: Ears are to be short, well set on top of head, erect, well furred, of good substance, and with a strong ear base. They are to be rounded at the tips. Ears should balance with the head and body. When relaxed ears will be carried in a slight "V".
Faults-
Ears that are pointed, lack furring, or do not balance with the body.
Disqualifications from Competition - Ears that exceed 3-1/2 inches
in length; wool more then halfway up the ear.
FUR & WOOL
MANE-Points 30: The mane is to be wool. It should be a strong, wavy wool with a guard hair tip. Crimping of the wool is especially evident in the junior animals. The prominent portion of the mane (top and sides near the ears) should be at least 2 inches in length on senior animals. The mane is to form a full circle around the head, extending to a "V" at the back of the neck. The wool of the mane should be dense enough to make the mane full and prominent. It may fall into a fringe between the ears or form a wool cap across the brow. Any wool in the front of the ears should enhance the prominence of the mane, but not obscure the eye. The face below the wool cap should be clean of wool. The side trimmings and chest may be noticeably longer.
Faults
- A mane that is thin in appearance, has gaps; a gradual change on the forehead
between the eyes and ears from normal fur to the wool of the mane.
Disqualifications from Competition - Breaks in the mane. A mane that consists
of normal fur instead of wool. Wool longer than 1 inch between the eyes.
COAT-
Points 15: (Rollback) The fur should be soft, dense, of medium length, and
prime. It should show lots of life and glossiness. Ideally the saddle, flanks,
and rump of the animal should be clean of wool. Transition wool is allowed on
the lower rear sides and rump of juniors and seniors..
Transition wool is defined as a significantly shorter wool on the hips and
face. Transition wool is not to exceed 2 inches.
Faults
- Fur that is long, thin, or poor in texture; excessive wool on the flanks of
a junior animal.
Disqualifications from Competition - Wool across the saddle on junior
or senior animals. Lack of a distinct break between the wool of the mane and
any wool on the hip.
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COLOR - Points 10: The fur and eye color is to be as described under each variety.
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Judging is to be by classes of sex and age in each variety, with a Best and Best Opposite Sex of each variety being selected. The Best of Breed and Best Opposite Sex are to be selected from the BOV and BOSV.
COLOR
DESCRIPTIONS
BLACK:
The surface color is to be rich, jet black over the entire animal
and extending well down the hair shaft. The undercolor is to be a dark slate-blue.
Eyes- brown.
Faults: Fault animal for having faded color, scattered white hairs, or a
light undercolor.
(Included on the SECOND
CERTIFICATE - Theresa Mueller)
BLUE:
The surface color is to be dark blue over the entire animal, extending
well down the hair shaft with a lighter blue undercolor.
Eyes Blue-Gray
Faults: Fault animals for having faded color, scattered white hairs
or light under color
(Included on the SECOND CERTIFICATE - Theresa Mueller)
BLUE POINT:
The points (nose, ears, feet, and tail) are to be a medium bluish
gray color. The point color fades to a light creamy white body free from smut
or dark shading, to contrast with the darker points. Undercolor should be creamy
white. Darker shading is permissible around the eyes.
Eyes Blue-Gray
Faults: Streaks, blotches, or smut on body, brown (sepia) tinge to points,
points too light to contrast well with the body color, scattered white hairs.
Disqualifications
from Competition - White on underside of tail, any marten type markings.
(Included on the FOURTH CERTIFICATE - Lynne Schultz)
BLUE TORTOISE:
The body color is to be fawn, blending into a blue shading over the
rump and carrying well onto the haunches. Top color should carry well down into
the undercolor blending into a cream color next to the skin. Top of the tail
should match the body color, with the underside to be blue, blending into a
cream next to the skin. Belly should match shadings, with cream undercolor.
Head shadings should be darkest blue at the whisker bed, blending into a lighter
shade along the jaw line, darkening again at the ear base and blending up into
the ears to match the body color.
Eyes Blue-Gray
Faults: Stray white hairs, faded shading
Disqualifications
from Competition - white belly or tail
(Included on the FOURTH CERTIFICATE - Lynne Schultz)
CHESTNUT
AGOUTI:The surface color on the top sides of the body is to be a
light brown, ticked with black. The intermediary band is to be a well defined
orange over a dark slate-blue undercolor. The chest is to be a light brown over
a dark slate-blue undercolor. The undercolor of the belly is to be slate blue.
The top of the tail is to be black, sparsely ticked with light brown, over a
dark slate-blue undercolor. The nape of the neck is to be orange, with ears
laced in black. Eyes- brown.
Faults: Animals that are too light in the color of the intermediary band
or undercolor or are to light or dark in surface color.
CHINCHILLA:
The surface color on the top and sides of the body is to be pearl
white ticked with jet black. The intermediary band is to be a well defined pearl
white over a dark slate blue undercolor. The chest is to be a pearl white over
a slate blue undercolor. The top of the tail is to be black, sparsely ticked
with white, over a dark slate blue undercolor. The nape of the neck is to be
white, with ears laced in black. Toenails to be uniform and dark. An allowance
to be made for distortion of ring color in mane and transitional wool area.
Eyes Brown.
Faults: Fault animals that are too light or too dark in surface color, or
too light in the color of the intermediary band or undercolor. Brown patches
or brownish intermediary bands are undesirable.
Disqualifications
from Competition - Disqualify animals with extreme dark or light color, brown
patches of color, or extreme brownish tinge in ring color. Animals without black
lacing on ears are to be disqualified.
(Included on the SEVENTH CERTIFICATE - Anita Moore)
CHOCOLATE:
The surface color is to be a rich dark chocolate brown over the entire
animal and extending well down the hair shaft. The undercolor is to be a dove-gray.
Toenails are to be a uniform dark brown.
Eyes Brown. Ruby cast permissable but not desired.
Faults: Faded, rusty or "yellowed" color, scattered white hairs,
light undercolor.
(Included on the FIFTH CERTIFICATE - Lee Nevills)
CHOCOLATE
AGOUTI: The surface color on the top and sides of the body is to
be a rich chestnut brown, tipped with chocolate tipped guard hairs. The intermediate
band is to be tan over a dove gray undercolor. The top of the tail is to be
chocolate, sparsely ticked with tan, over dove gray undercolor. The nape of
the neck is to be tan with the ears laced in chocolate. Toenails to be uniform
and dark. An allowance to be made for distortion of ring color in mane and transitional
wool area.
Eyes Brown.
Faults: Fault animals that are too light or too dark in surface color, or
too light in the color of the intermediary band or undercolor.
(Included on the SEVENTH CERTIFICATE - Anita Moore)
CHOCOLATE
TORTOISE: The surface of the body is to be a rusty orange color,
blending with a light to medium chocolate "shading" on the sides,
rump, belly, head, ears, feet and tail. The color is to extend well down the
hair shaft to an off-white undercolor. Toenails are to be uniform and may be
medium to dark brown.
Eyes Brown. Ruby cast permissable but not desired.
Faults: Surface color too light or too dark, smut over the back, scattered
white hairs. Light color on the underside of the tail is undesirable.
(Included on the FIFTH CERTIFICATE - Lee Nevills)
LILAC:
The surface color is to be dove-gray with a pinkish tint over the
entire animal and extending well down the hair shaft. The undercolor is to be
a pale dove-gray. Toenails may be light but not white and must be uniform.
Eyes Blue-gray. Ruby cast permissable but not desired.
Faults: Faded or rusty color or scattered white hairs.
(Included on the FIFTH CERTIFICATE - Lee Nevills)
OPAL:
The surface color on the top and sides of the body is to be medium
blue mingled with fawn and is to carry as uniformly as possible down the sides
of the body. The intermediary band on the hair shaft of the surface color is
to be fawn over a medium slate-blue undercolor. The head, ears, legs, and feet
are to match the surface color of the body. The chest is to be fawn over a medium
slate-blue undercolor. The underside of the tail and around the vent are white
to the skin. The foot pads, around the nostrils, eyes, and inner surface of
the ears are to be white. The top of the tail is to be medium blue, sparsely
ticked with fawn, over a medium slate-blue undercolor. The nape of the neck
is to be fawn. The belly is to have a white surface color (except where lap
spots appear), back of forelegs, inside of hind legs, top of hind feet, and
underside of the lower jaw. The undercolor of the belly is to be slate blue.
Toenails to be medium to dark and must be uniform.
Eyes Blue-gray.
Faults: Light surface color, light color in the intermediary band, or light
in the undercolor.
Disqualifications
from Competition - white undercolor. (An allowance to be made for color band
distortion in the mane and transitional wool areas.)
(Included on the FIFTH CERTIFICATE - Lee Nevills)
ORANGE:
Surface color to be a bright golden color, extending well down the
hair shaft and carried evenly over the head, outer ear, front of foreleg, outside
the hind legs and the top of tail. Chest color is to be consistent with body
surface color. Belly, back of forelegs, inside of hind legs, top of hind feet,
and underside of lower jaw to be white with an off-white undercolor. Lap spots
should be present. Underside of tail and vent area, inside of ear, eye circles
and under nostrils should be white.
Eyes Brown
Faults: Fault severely for smut or ticking on body or lacing on ears; lack
of lap spots, color faded or washed out in appearance
(Included on the FOURTH CERTIFICATE - Lynne Schultz)
OTTER:
Black, Blue, Chocolate and Lilac compete together. Otters should
not be judged as a marked variety. Markings are to be the final consideration
after type, fur and body color. Surface & Under Color: The surface
& under color of the head outside of the ears, front of the fore feet, outside
of the hind feet, and the top and sides of the body are to be described in the
respective self varieties. Markings: Black and Chocolate animals will
have orange to creamy orange marking color, whild Blue and Lilac animals will
have fawn markings and ticking color. The belly, nostrils, eye circles, jowls,
underside of the tail, inside of the ears, back of the fore feet and the inside
of the hind feet and legs are to be creamy white, highlighted by an orange or
fawn marking as it meets the self color of the body. The border color between
the belly and flanks shall continue down the the hind feet as it meets the color
of the body. The undercolor of the belly is to be as described in the respective
self varieties. The triangle and collar are to be orange to creamy white. No
ticking is preferred. The eye color is to be as described in the respective
self varieties.
Faults: Brown or rusty tinge on body color; orange to creamy orange hairs
in areas other than the patterned areas; mealiness on the ears, head, muzzle;
faded or indistinct markings. Scattered white hairs over the body.
(Included on the SIXTH CERTIFICATE - Regina Mayhugh)
POINTED
WHITE : Body color is to be pure white. Markings may be black, blue,
chocolate or lilac, and must be present on the nose, ears, feet and tail. Allowances
should be made for developing color on juniors. Toenails must show color.
Eyes Pink
Faults: Markings extrememly faded; frosted appearance to the marking color.
Disqualifications
from Competition - Any Tan Pattern marking appearing in the marking pattern.
(Included on the THIRD CERTIFICATE - Dawn Guth)
RUBY EYED
WHITE: Color is to be a pure white and uniform throughout. Eyes--
Pink.
SABLE POINT::
Color on the nose, ears, feet legs and tail is to be a rich sepia brown color.
The marking color is to shade rapidly to a brown body color. The entire upper
body is to be creamy brown color, with a lighter almost white undercolor. A
slightly deeper body color may occur along the saddle but is not desirable.
The ideal is an animal whose surface color is light enough to give good contrast
with the point color. Eyes - Brown
Faults: Blotchy surface color on body: markings too light to provide
good contrast with the body.
SABLE
MARTEN : The surface color of the head, outside of the ears, back,
outside of the legs, and the top of the tail is to be a rich sepia brown with
a slightly lighter undercolor. The surface color will fade to a lighter sepia
on the sides and chest. All blending of color is to be gradual and free from
blotches and streaks. The nostrils, eye circles, jowls, inside of ears, triangle,
collar, back of fore fett, inside of hind legs, belly and the underside of the
tail are to be a silver-white in color. Prominent silver-white guard hairs are
to be evenly distributed around the chest, sides, and lower hindquarters.
Eyes Brown
(Included on the SIXTH CERTIFICATE - Regina Mayhugh)
SEAL:
Color is to be a rich dark sepia brown (bordering on black) on the
saddle from the nape of the neck to the tail, shading to a just slightly lighter
tint on flank, chest and belly. Color is to carry well down the hair shaft with
undercolor to match shadings throughout. Toenails must be a uniform dark brown.
Eyes Brown. Ruby cast permissable but not desired.
Faults: Faded, "sunburned" or rusty tinge, too dark to show contrast
in shadings, body color too light.
(Included on the FIFTH CERTIFICATE - Lee Nevills)
SIAMESE
SABLE: The surface color is to be a rich sepia brown on the head,
ears, back, outside of legs, and top of the tail. The surface color will fade
to a lighter sepia on the sides, chest, belly, inside of legs, and underside
of the tail. Dark face color is to fade from the eyes to the jaws and all blending
of color is to be gradual and free from blotched or streaks. The undercolor
will be slightly lighter than the surface color. Eyes-- brown.
Faults: fault animals that have streaks, blotched or poor color blending,
Scattered white hairs, or lack of darker color in the loin area is a fault
SMOKE
PEARL: Color is to be a rich smoke gray on the face, ears, saddle,
outside of legs, and top of tail. Saddle color is to shade off grandually to
a soft pearl gray on the flanks, chest and belly, inside of legs and underside
of tail. All blending of shading is to be gradual and free from blotches or
streaks. The under color will be slightly lighter than the surface color.
Eyes Blue-Gray, Ruby cast Permissible
Faults: Blotchy shading, animals that are too dark or too light to show a
contrast in shading.
(Included on the THIRD CERTIFICATE - Dawn Guth)
SQUIRREL:
The surface color on the top and sides of the body is to be blue
mingled with white. The intermediary band is to be white over a medium slate
blue undercolor. The chest is to be light pearl over a medium slate blue undercolor.
The undercolor of the belly is to be slate blue. The top of the tail is to be
slate blue, sparsely ticked with white, over a medium slate blue undercolor.
The nape of the neck is to be white. Toenails to be uniform and dark.
Faults: Fault animals that are too light or too dark in surface color, or
too light in the color of the intermediary band or undercolor. Brown patches
or brownish intermediary bands are undesirable. An allowance to be made
for distortion of ring color in mane and transitional wool area.
Eyes Blue-Gray
Faults: Fault animals that are too light or dark in surface color. Brown
patches or brownish intermediary band are undesirable.
Disqualifications
from Competition - Disqualify animals with extreme dark or light color, brown
patches of color, or extreme bluish tinge in ring color. Animals without blue
lacing on ears are to be disqualified.
(Included on the SEVENTH CERTIFICATE - Anita Moore)
TORTOISE:
The
surface of the body is to be a rusty orange color on the loin, blending with
a gray-black on the sides, rump, belly, head, feet and tail. The color is to
extend well down the hair shaft to an off-white undercolor. Eyes - Brown.
Faults:
Stray white hairs; underside of tail light in color.
IT
IS IMPORTANT WHEN JUDGING COLOR ON THE LIONHEAD
TO REMEMBER THAT THE WOOL OF
THE MANE MAY
SOFTEN OR DEFUSE COLOR IN THE MANE AREA OF THE COAT