saby
Moderator
Anti Fun Officer
@Background Pony #7C7A
Clarification: fetlock is the joint between the cannon bone and the pastern bone, and sometimes the hair growing on that joint.
Clarification: fetlock is the joint between the cannon bone and the pastern bone, and sometimes the hair growing on that joint.
This image shows part of the cannon, the bulbous part is the fetlock joint, the narrower part below that joint is the pastern. The border beween the hoof and the rest of the leg is the coronet.
This image shows a fluffy coronet, not a fluffy fetlock.
This one shows an explicit pastern tuft or a coronet tuft (currently tagged “fetlock tuft” although the actual fetlock is smooth and untufted)
This one has perfectly smooth legs (with semi-realistic joint shapes) but is still tagged “fetlock tuft”
The tag we call “unshorn fetlocks” in fact refers to “unshorn coronets” (although often there is also enough feather on the leg to actually warrant “unshorn fetlocks”), and the way it’s described (“hooves separated with fur”and “Hooves that are visually distinct from the legs with fur between them.”) is a disaster on its own. Moreover, “fluffy hoofies, fetlocks, fetlock, fluffy hooves, shire hooves” all alias into it while “fetlocks” and “fetlock” probably were meant to refer to “fetlock tuft” (which is independent on the coronet) and “fluffy hooves” which may and “shire hooves” which definitely do refer to profuse feather over the entire lower leg. “Classical unicorn” should probably imply “fetlock tuft” and not “unshorn fetlocks”, too.
This image shows a horse with entirely and profusely feathered lower legs. It’s only a smidge exaggerated to what RL Irish cobs can have. Currently tagged “long feather”.
This image shows perfectly smooth or clean shaven lower legs but counts for “unshorn fetlocks” because the hoof is visually distinct from the coat.
This image shows an unshorn coronet, should be tagged “unshorn fetlocks” (as the tag currently is) but is tagged “fetlock tuft”.
This image is one of the rather few that show an actual “fetlock tuft”, a tuft of hair, originating from the fetlock
Oh yeah “feather” is an equestrian term of art for longer than all short hair on the lower leg. If it sticks out even a bit, it’s “feather”.