The Most Royal Face in Cats
Persian cats are the opposite of subtle. Long, luxurious fur that requires daily brushing. Flat, squished faces that look permanently mildly offended. Big round eyes that communicate entitled tranquility. Short, stocky bodies carried with the air of someone who has never had to worry about anything. A Persian cat plushy, done right, should capture all of that personality in one glance.
The challenge on Persians is rendering the coat. The fur is long, silky, and often multi-colored, with visible undercoat showing through in certain light. Generic AI tools flatten this into a single-tone puff. Our prompts preserve the layered texture, the directional grain of the coat, and the way the fur frames the face like a lion's mane.
The Flat Face Problem
Persians are brachycephalic, like pugs and French Bulldogs. The flat face is the most-commonly-botched feature in generic plushy outputs. Our styles explicitly handle the smooshed nose, the tiny mouth that barely peeks out from the fur, and the wide-set round eyes. The famous Persian "sad face" or "grumpy face" expression is preserved where the original photo shows it.
"A Persian cat with a normal-length muzzle is an imposter. The flat face is the breed."
Coat Variations
Persians come in virtually every color. Solid white, solid black, blue (gray), cream, red, tortoiseshell, calico, bicolor, tabby, silver, smoke, shaded. All handled. The model preserves whatever pattern your photo shows, including the difficult-to-render silver and smoke coats that have color variations within a single hair shaft.
Style Recommendations
Persians are made for luxury styles. Jellycat, Vintage Steiff, Velvet Smooth, and Cloud Fluff all flatter the breed. Kawaii and Classic work well for pet parents who want maximum cute. For something unexpected, Galaxy Cosmic on a silver Persian produces an otherworldly output. Avoid styles that emphasize angular features (Pixel 8-bit, Origami Paper) since they fight against the Persian's signature softness.
Photo Tips
Persians photograph best in soft, diffuse light that shows the fur texture without flattening it. Eye-level, front-facing shots work well because the flat face is the defining feature. If possible, catch a photo after a recent grooming when the coat is at its fluffiest.
Upload your Persian's photo and pick a style. First one's free.