There’s something incredibly satisfying about drawing a shiny horse coat – that moment when it catches the light and suddenly looks real. It’s also one of the quickest ways to get frustrated if you rush it.
With the Year of the Fire Horse now underway, it feels like the perfect time to talk about shine.
When shine feels tricky, it’s rarely a lack of ability. It’s usually because your brain is shouting, “That highlight is white – use the white pencil!”. But on a horse coat, highlights are almost never pure white. They’re softer, warmer, and created by lighter coat colours sitting next to stronger darks.
That’s where real shine comes from.
How to build shine on a horse coat
1. Start with one “anchor” colour
Choose a colour you can see running consistently through the coat.
- Go over the whole area very lightly
- Don’t panic if it looks grainy (especially on Pastelmat) – that’s normal
- You’re simply placing the map
This first layer is about getting the form in place, not the detail.
2. Decide where your highlight lives (then protect it)
Highlights need planning.
Before you add darker tones, be clear on:
- where the light is strongest
- where it fades out
- where the darkest contrast will sit nearby
Then keep that highlight area lighter – even if it looks odd at first.
3. Let Hair Direction Do The Work
For shine to look believable, your strokes must follow the coat:
- over the shoulder blade (curve)
- along the muscle (flow)
- around any swirl or change in direction
Hair direction isn’t a fussy detail – it’s how the viewer understands the structure underneath.
4. Build Depth With Colour Shifts, Not Pressure
This is where the magic starts.
Instead of pressing harder, layer in supporting colours:
- warmer pinky neutrals (like Cinnamon)
- deeper browns (Burnt Sienna)
- richer shadows (Raisin)
- and for warm depth without dullness: Caput Mortuum Violet
That last one is a favourite for horse coats – it darkens beautifully without turning flat or sooty.
5. Glaze For Glow (Tiny Amounts)
A light orange glaze over your layers can really enhance shine. It:
- enriches what’s underneath
- adds vibrancy
- helps the coat feel alive
Keep it light though. Glazing is like seasoning – a little goes a long way.
6. Lift Highlights With A Putty Eraser
White pencil over dark colours can push things pink or muddy, especially over deep browns.
Instead:
- shape a putty eraser to a fine point
- lift pigment in the direction of the hair
- soften edges by lifting into the highlight so it fades naturally
You’re not aiming for white paper – just a whisper of pigment left behind.
7. Add Fine Detail Last
This is where most people trip up.
If you add detail too early the tooth fights you, lines go scratchy and everything looks messy.
Once you’ve built enough layers the pencil glides, the detail sits properly and the coat starts to look sleek. Layers first. Polish last.
There will always be a stage where your drawing looks unfinished, dull, or just plain wrong.That doesn’t mean you’ve failed. It simply means you’re mid-process.
Shine isn’t added at the end – it’s earned slowly, layer by layer, with patience and trust. And once it clicks, it changes how you approach realism entirely.
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