You stand at the field edge and take them in as a single, clear form against the light. They occupy the grass with four evenly placed legs beneath a compact, muscular barrel, head held at a moderate angle that emphasizes the sweep of neck into crest. The coat reads bay, warm brown that flashes gold where the sun strikes the flank and deepens to near black at the mane, tail, and lower legs. A narrow white star marks the forehead, and a small pale snip shows at the muzzle. Two legs bear white stockings that end at thin, pink coronet bands.
From this viewpoint, shoulders and hindquarters appear firm and rounded. The topline from withers through loin is even, neither hollowed nor swayed. Light sketches the longissimus along the spine so that muscle ridges show as subtle bands. The mane is short where a bridle path might be trimmed, the forelock kept aside. The tail is full and coarse, hanging to just above the hocks. Faint dapples cross the flank and upper hind when the eye shifts. Small pale scars pepper the gaskin and flank; a narrow extra growth ring encircles the right fore hoof.
The head is long and refined in equine proportion. Large lateral eyes catch the sky and reflect it, glossy and dark beneath a calm brow and framed by long upper lashes. Nostrils sit as soft rims, relaxed and elastic. The muzzle reveals pink skin at the snip and is edged with stiff whiskers. The throatlatch narrows into a smooth channel where the jugular lies.
Legs read as precise architecture. Cannons are straight and columnar, pasterns slope moderately, and hocks show clean angles. Shoes glint faintly at the toes, nails clinched and neat, trimming planes even. Chestnuts and ergots are present as expected.
The field is a plain backdrop. Short grass bends in bands of green and gold, a low, weathered fence runs beyond a near slope, and a copse outlines the horizon. Shadows from late light lengthen across the flank and neck, emphasizing coat grain and sheen. Dust clings lightly to the fetlocks where the soil is dry.
Up close, the proportions mark them as a general-purpose riding type rather than an extreme specialist: shoulder length and angle that suggest reach, a short, strong loin, and a pelvis broad enough for propulsive power. No excessive fat, no obvious swelling, and no hoof deformation are visible. They stand as a particular bay shape of muscle and hair, marked by small individual details and fully integrated into the honest landscape of grass, fence, and light. It is what can be seen, cataloged, and recorded.