Species defines the color block
Sun Conures carry yellow head fading to orange chest with green wings. Jendays are similar but with a distinct color boundary. Green-Cheeked are predominantly olive with a maroon tail and gray chest. Nandays have a black head and blue throat. We read which species your bird is from the photo and renders the specific color transitions rather than defaulting to a generic 'bright Conure.'
The tail is a proportion check
Conures have proportionally longer pointed tails than most companion parrots — roughly half the body length. We hold the tail at the right proportion rather than shortening it to fit a tidier composition. The pointed tip distinguishes Conures from short-tailed parrots like lovebirds or parrotlets at any portrait scale.
Pop Art and Garden suit the species
Pop Art handles the Sun and Jenday saturation cleanly — the color transitions reduce to bold blocks without losing the species. Garden flatters Green-Cheeked's subtler palette. Watercolor softens the bright species without muting them. Art Nouveau treats the long tail as decorative line work. Small bird, smaller formats — a Conure at wall-ornament scale reads more naturally than at anchor size.