If you have a fursona — or you’re thinking about creating one — a furry reference sheet (also called a “ref sheet” or “refsheet”) is the single most important piece of art you can own. It’s your character’s official document. Every artist you commission will need it. Every roleplay profile will be built around it.
This guide covers everything: what a ref sheet actually is, what it needs to include, how much it costs in 2026, where to get one made, and exactly what to tell your artist.
1. What Is a Furry Reference Sheet?
Think of it like a character bible or a blueprint. When you commission art from different artists, you send them your ref sheet and they immediately know exactly what your character looks like — no guessing, no inconsistencies, no back-and-forth.
Without a ref sheet, every commission becomes a phone-tag game: “What color are their eyes? How long is the tail? Are the ear tips dark or light?” A ref sheet answers all of that before the question is even asked.
What’s the Difference Between a Ref Sheet and a Regular Commission?
| Feature | Regular Commission | Reference Sheet |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | One standalone artwork | Character documentation |
| Views shown | Usually one pose | Front + back + extras |
| Color labels | None needed | Hex codes / swatches labeled |
| Used for future art | No | Yes — every time |
| Detail level | Depends on the piece | High — every marking shown |
| Background | Optional | Usually plain/white |
| Cost vs value | One-time use | Used for years |
2. What to Include in a Furry Ref Sheet
A good ref sheet is complete enough that any artist — even one who has never seen your character before — can draw them perfectly. Here’s what every ref sheet must have and what’s optional but helpful:
Always include a “do not draw” or “design notes” text box on your ref sheet. Things like “scar on left eye is always present” or “tail is always fluffy, never sleek” save you dozens of correction requests later.
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3. Types of Furry Ref Sheets
Not all ref sheets are the same. The right type depends on what you need your character for — casual roleplay, serious commissioning, fursuit building, or adult content.
Simple / Basic Ref Sheet
Front + back view, color swatches, basic face close-up. Flat or cell-shaded. Perfect for new fursonas or tight budgets. Gets the job done for most commissions. Usually $40–80.
Standard Ref Sheet
Front + back + side view, expression sheet, detail callouts, outfit reference, full color swatches. The most common type. What most commission artists expect to receive. Usually $80–180.
Premium / Full Ref Sheet
Everything in standard plus multiple outfits, SFW + NSFW versions, alternate forms (feral, anthro, human), turnaround views, props and accessories. Built to last years. Usually $180–400+.
Fursuit Reference Sheet
Designed specifically for fursuit makers — includes precise marking maps, exact color codes, claw/paw pad colors, head shape guides, and any seam-relevant details. Must be highly accurate. Usually $120–300.
NSFW Reference Sheet
Includes adult anatomy views alongside the standard ref. Either as one combined sheet or as a “SFW + NSFW bundle.” Essential if you regularly commission adult art of your character. Usually $100–250.
4. How to Commission a Furry Ref Sheet
First time commissioning? Here’s exactly what to do — step by step — to get a ref sheet you’ll love.
Write your character description
Species, body type, fur/scale/skin colors (with hex codes if possible), all markings, eye color, hair style, tail type, any unique features. The more detail the better — vague descriptions lead to corrections.
Gather any visual references
Even rough sketches, Picrew designs, screenshots from a character creator, or “this animal but with these markings” photos help enormously. Artists work faster and more accurately with visual input.
Choose your ref sheet type
Basic for simple characters or first fursonas. Standard for most characters. Premium if you plan to commission lots of art. NSFW bundle if you want adult content options.
Submit your commission request
Fill out the quote form with all your character details. Include all references, preferred color palette, and any “must include” or “do not include” notes. We’ll respond within 24 hours with a price and timeline.
Review the sketch and give feedback
You’ll receive a rough sketch before any final work is done. This is the most important stage — check every marking, proportion, and color. Request any changes here. Revisions after finalizing cost more time.
Receive your finished ref sheet
Final high-resolution file delivered to your email — typically PNG at 300 DPI. You own the character design. Commercial rights are included. Save multiple backups!
5. What to Tell Your Artist (Template)
Copy and fill in this template when submitting your commission. The more you fill in, the faster and more accurate your ref sheet will be:
Body type: [Lean / Muscular / Curvy / Average / Chubby]
Height: [e.g. 5’8″ / Tall / Short / Average]
Primary fur/scale color: [hex code if known]
Secondary colors: [belly, markings, tips — with hex codes]
Eye color: [color + any special detail like heterochromia]
Markings: [describe each marking — location, shape, color]
Hair: [color, length, style]
Tail: [bushy / thin / long / short / special markings]
Ears: [shape, size, inner color, any tufts]
Outfit: [describe default outfit OR “no outfit needed”]
Ref sheet type: [Basic / Standard / Premium / NSFW]
Visual refs: [attach any images]
Do not draw: [anything the artist should never include]
Notes: [anything else important]
6. Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a ref sheet before commissioning other art?
Technically no — but it makes everything much easier. Without a ref sheet, each commission requires you to write a long description and hope the artist interprets it correctly. A ref sheet eliminates all guesswork instantly.
Can I update my ref sheet later?
Yes — fursonas evolve! Many artists offer “redesign” or “update” commissions that are cheaper than a full new ref sheet. Keep your old versions — some people love seeing character evolution over the years.
What file format should I ask for?
PNG at 300 DPI minimum. Ask for the original PSD or layered file if you want to make future edits. Always keep a backup copy in cloud storage — losing your ref sheet is a nightmare.
How long does a ref sheet commission take?
Typically 3–10 business days depending on the artist’s queue and the complexity of your design. Rush options are sometimes available for an extra fee. Ask upfront if you have a deadline.
Do I own my ref sheet after commissioning it?
You own your character design. The artwork itself is usually licensed to you for personal use — commercial rights (merch, Patreon, etc.) may cost extra or be included depending on the artist. Always clarify this before paying.
Get Your Furry Ref Sheet Made
Tell us your fursona — species, colors, markings. We create a professional ref sheet you’ll use for years. Commission slots are open right now.