Cats have always understood something dogs don't: they belong on walls. Egyptian pharaohs knew it. European aristocrats who kept cats in velvet-draped parlors knew it. Your cat, staring at you from across the room with the serene confidence of something that has never once doubted its own importance, knows it too.
A cat portrait painting does exactly what a cat would want — elevates them to the status they have always rightfully held. And with four distinct art styles to choose from, there's a version that matches every cat's personality.
For the elegant, mysterious cat — the Siamese, the all-black, the one who sits in exactly the right light — watercolor is extraordinary. The translucent washes catch the sheen of their coat, the subtle color variations most people don't even notice, the way light moves through their fur. It's atmospheric in a way that suits a creature of such deliberate mystique.
Oil painting is for the cat who takes up more space than their body should physically allow. Rich, saturated color, deep shadows, the kind of gravitas that says "I belong in a manor house." It captures weight and presence in a way that feels permanent — which is exactly how your cat already thinks of itself.
The royal portrait is essentially what every cat already believes they look like. Velvet. Crown. An expression of tolerant condescension directed at the viewer. It's funny, it's flattering, and it hangs remarkably well.
Pop art is for the showoff — the cat who strikes poses, the one with a particularly striking face or markings that beg for graphic treatment. Bold outlines, vivid color, four panels of the same magnificent face in different colorways. It goes on the gallery wall where everyone will see it.