Breeds · Siberian Husky
Ice-blue eyes, wolf-grey mask — a portrait with cinema in it.
Preview your Siberian Husky — freeOne phone photo · Preview in about a minute · Love it or we redo it — free
No breed hands an artist more drama than a Husky. The pale eyes — glacier blue, amber, or one of each — sit inside a graphic facial mask that’s different on every single dog. That mask is the fingerprint: the widow’s peak, the eyeliner lines, the exact border where grey gives way to white. Get it wrong by a centimetre and it’s someone else’s dog.
That’s why the mask and eyes are locked before any styling. The double coat matters too: a Husky’s fur is layered smoke — slate, silver, cream — not flat grey, and the portrait keeps that depth whether your Husky is classic grey-and-white, red, agouti or all white.
Heterochromia (one blue eye, one brown) is preserved exactly. For bi-eyed Huskies it’s usually the whole point of the portrait.

The Husky mask is practically ink already — bold darks, clean whites, and the pale eyes burning out of the contrast. The most striking choice for this breed.
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Oil gives the double coat its smoky depth and makes blue eyes look lit from inside.
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Yes — eye colour is locked with the facial features before styling, including heterochromia. You preview the result free before paying.
Any sharp frame works, even from a burst. Face visible, eyes open — the portrait is composed around the head, not the pose.
Previews are free. A 4K digital download is $29 USD, a 16×20" poster is $45, and a gallery canvas is $85 — framing adds $20.
Upload one clear photo and preview free. Digital $29 · Poster $45 · Canvas $85.
Start your free previewRemembering a Siberian Husky you've lost? Our memorial portraits are made with extra care.
Also explore memorial portraits and the gift guide.