The Silent Favorite
Rabbits are the third most popular pet in the United States, after dogs and cats, but they get far less AI-generated plushy attention than they deserve. The breed (or really the species, since "bunny" covers many breeds) is built for plushy form. Soft rounded body, floppy or upright ears, tiny twitching nose, enormous eyes, and that specific posture, the crouched loaf or the full stretch, that every rabbit owner recognizes instantly.
Our prompts handle every common breed: Holland Lop, Mini Rex, Lionhead, Netherland Dwarf, Flemish Giant, English Angora, and the many mixed and unknown-breed rabbits that are actually the majority of pet bunnies. The distinguishing features of each (ear shape, fur length, body proportion) are preserved across all 56 styles.
Ears Are the Personality
Upright-eared bunnies read as alert and curious. Lop-eared bunnies read as calm and slightly resigned. The ear position is the most expressive feature a rabbit has, more than the face. Our prompts treat ears as a signature, not a default, and preserve whatever ear type the original photo shows. In a kawaii rabbit, the ears become sparkle-edged sensory antennae. In a vintage Steiff treatment, they're long felt-fabric strips with subtle wire structure.
"Rabbit ears aren't decoration. They're the entire emotional range of the animal."
The Nose Twitch
Even in a still plushy image, a rabbit should look like it's about to twitch its nose. Our styles preserve the small pink triangle and the specific way rabbit whiskers fan out, which together create that "about to sniff something" energy that defines the species.
Style Recommendations
Rabbits are luxury plushy material. Jellycat, Vintage Steiff, Classic, and Cloud Fluff all produce exceptional outputs. Kawaii rabbits are uniquely cute because the style's anime-eye treatment pairs naturally with the species' already-large eyes. For something unexpected, Floral Botanical and Cottagecore both work beautifully on rabbits because the associations (gardens, meadows) match the aesthetic.
Photo Tips
Rabbits are hard to photograph because they move constantly. If you have a photo of your bunny in the "loaf" position (body tucked, all four feet hidden), use it. That pose is the most-universally-cute rabbit silhouette. Side angles work better than straight-on for most breeds.
Upload your bunny's photo and pick a style. First transformation is free.