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Oriental Shorthair

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Oriental Shorthair
An Oriental Shorthair Blue Eyed White - Notice how the line of the nose, eyes, and middle of the ear form a triangular wedge.
Country of origin
United States
Alternative Names
Foreign Type
Breed standards (external links)
AACE, ACFA, ACF,CFA, TICA,
GCCF, CCA, FIFe

The Oriental Shorthair is a breed of cat. It is also called a "Foreign Type" cat. This cat combines the Siamese body with a diversity of colorings and patterns.

Contents

[edit] Oriental Shorthairs as pets

Oriental Shorthairs are intelligent, social animals who bond closely to their people. They are inquisitive, highly friendly, emotional, and sometimes quite vocal. People have commented that the Oriental Shorthair looks like a Greyhound or a Chihuahua. Many comment that they are much more 'dog-like' in personality.

[edit] Description

A pile of Orientals - Two white, one blue and white bicolor, and one ebony and white bicolor.

The Oriental Shorthair is a self-coloured (non-pointed) member of the Siamese Family. They can be found in solid colors (white, red, cream, ebony, blue, chestnut, lavender, cinnamon, or fawn), smoke (white undercoat to any of the above except white), shaded (only the hair tips colored), parti-color (red or cream splashes on any of the above), tabby (mackerel/striped, ticked, spotted, and blotched/classic), and bi-colored (any of the above, with white). In total, there are over 300 color and pattern combinations possible. Though in CFA, pointed cats from Oriental Shorthair parents are considered AOV (Any Other Variety), in TICA, as well as in the majority of worldwide Cat Associations, these cats are considered to be, and compete as, Siamese.

An Oriental Shorthair ebony-ticked tabby

Oriental Shorthairs have expressive, almond-shaped eyes, a wedge-shaped head with large ears that fit in the wedge of the head. Their bodies are very elegant yet muscular. When seeing an Oriental Shorthair, one would never guess them to be as solid as they are.

The longhaired version of the Oriental Shorthair, Oriental Longhair, simply carries a pair of the recessive long hair gene.

[edit] Origins

The Siamese cat was imported to Britain from Siam (Thailand) in the later half of the 1800's. According to reports, both pointed and solid colors were imported. The gene that causes the color to be restricted to the points is a recessive gene, therefore the general population of the cats of Siam were largely self (solid) colored. When the cats from Siam were bred, the pointed cats were eventually registered as Siamese the others were referred to as "non-blue eyed siamese" or foreign shorthair. Other breeds that were developed from the moggies of Siam include the Havana Brown and the Korat.

It was not until 1977 that the Oriental Shorthair was accepted for competition into the CFA. In 1985, the CFA recognized the bicolor oriental shorthair. The bicolor is any one of the accepted oriental shorthair color patterns with the addition of white to the belly, face, and legs/paws.

[edit] Colors

Colors include:

  • Apricot (ACFA)
  • Blue - pale blue grey to dark slate grey
  • Caramel (ACFA)
  • Chestnut (CFA), Havana (FIFE), Chocolate (ACFA) - rich chestnut brown
  • Cinnamon - light reddish brown
  • Cream - buff cream with preference toward lighter shades
  • Ebony - dense coal black
  • Fawn - light brownish lavender
  • Lavender (CFA and FIFE), Lilac (ACFA) - light purplish grey
  • Red - reddish orange
  • white - pure white

All solid cats shall have green eyes with the exception of the whites which can have green, blue, or odd colored eyes.

[edit] Patterns

[edit] Solid

Coat color is the uniform across the entire cat. Coat may not exhibit color restritions (points), spotting, (bicolor), or any sort of tabby pattern. Each hair shaft should be the same color from shaft to tip and be free of banding and tipping. Ghost patterns are highly undesirable in a solid colored cat.

[edit] Shaded Pattern

A Shaded cat will have a white undercoat with the tips being colored.

[edit] Smoke Pattern

The hair shaft will have a narrow band of white at the base which can only be seen when the hair is parted.

[edit] Parti-Color

A parti-color is essentially a patches of red/cream. patches may be well defined blotches of color to merled.

[edit] Tabby Pattern

Tabby patterns include ticked, spotted, mackerel, and classic. All cats regardless of the pattern they display have underlying tabby genetics. When the agouti gene that causes banding of the hair shaft is present, the tabby patterns are physically expressed. Each hair shaft should have a band of color around the middle of the hair shaft. e.g. an ebony ticked tabby will have a brown hair shaft with an ebony band around the middle.

[edit] Bicolor Pattern

The bicolor patten is created by the addition of a piebald gene to any of the other accepted colors/patterns. The cat will have white on its belly, legs,and an inverted V on the face.

[edit] Trivia

  • CFA's first registered Cinnamon was Ch. Tokira Dorado del Castaño, 2368-0001. Dorado was registered in October 1978.

[edit] Pictures of Oriental Shorthairs

Some great picturs of OSH
Image:20060723comanche.jpg Image:Trey mississippi.jpg Image:20060724litter.JPG
Image:Jacob lucky charms.jpg Image:Luna20060409a.jpg Image:20060714kittens.jpg
Image:20060721siri2.jpg Image:20060627.kittenpile.jpg



[edit] External links

fr:Chat oriental nl:Oosterse Korthaar sv:Orientaliskt korthår

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