Persian as The Duke

For Persian owners

A duke's wardrobe on a doll-faced cat

The duke wears tailoring, not regalia — and tailoring asks for a face that can carry composure for hours. That is essentially the Persian job description.

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Free instant preview · From $19.99

  • Noble
  • Aristocratic
  • Distinguished

The Persian × The Duke portrait

Tailoring fitted to a cobby shape

Where a king's robe drapes, a duke's waistcoat fits. That's a harder ask for any pet portrait, because tailoring has to land on the actual shoulders and chest of the subject. We rebuilds the brocade, the silk cravat, and the velvet cloak to follow your Persian's specific low-slung, broad-chested frame; the medallion hangs at the right height; nothing reads as costume hire on a generic body.

The doll face under the cravat

A duke's portrait lives or dies on the face above the collar. The Persian gives it the easiest possible win — full cheeks, snub nose, large round eyes, the composed bearing of a cat that has never had to prove anything. The Renaissance light lands across the brocade and rises to a quiet glow on the face. The result reads as a period portrait of an actual minor nobleman who happened to be a cat.

Common questions

About this portrait

Will the brocade and velvet collar fit around a Persian's short neck?
Yes — we is built to respect the Persian's short neck and dense ruff rather than forcing a long-necked collar shape onto a cobby cat. The cravat sits cleanly under the chin, the cloak gathers at the shoulders rather than choking the neck, and the medallion falls at the natural chest line. Nothing in the costume fights the Persian body shape.
Does the medallion or other regalia obscure my Persian's facial features?
No — the face above the collar is treated as the highest-priority element in the entire composition. The cheeks, the snub nose, the large round eyes, and the breed-specific Persian expression all stay precisely preserved. The medallion sits on the chest below the cravat; the cloak frames the body, not the face.
Will a calico or tortoiseshell pattern survive a velvet-and-brocade portrait?
Yes — distinctive coat patterns are preserved precisely, and we tune the brocade colors so they don't compete with the pattern on your cat's face. A tortoiseshell or calico Persian gets a more muted brocade so the face pattern reads cleanly; a solid Persian gets a richer, busier brocade for the contrast. The cat is always the focal point, regardless of pattern.

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