Here are my suggestions/ideas:
Picture:
The silver fox is a domesticated type of fox that is often used for fur-based clothing items and accessories. If it doesn't seem too complex, I think it could be another one of Malk's foxes; like the ones he created for the Natural Fox Litter in '10. SoulWings designed an uncommon butterfly wolf in the September of 2013 that looked exactly like this, but I think we would make a Malk Fox of it, too. The silver fox has a completely black pelt with dark-brown/amber-colored eyes and a white-tipped tail. There is white ticking along the face, hind legs, neck, and the entire back.
Picture:
This is a platinum fox, another domesticated fox used in fur-based clothing and accessories in the fashion industry. The picture is rather large, but it's the best one I could find. The platinum fox has amber-colored eyes and a blue-gray coat with a pattern similar to that of a Border Collie. It's ears are a slightly darker color than the rest of its pelt and its tail is tipped with white; as are its paws.
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This is the arctic fox wearing its summer coat. Yes, I know we already have an arctic fox by Malk, but that is the arctic fox in its winter coat. The arctic fox sheds its pure white winter fur and grows a summer cost that ranges from the darkest brown to the blackest black. The pelt is often described as a deep-brown like fresh top soil, with lighter brown hairs ticking that's seen along the hips and hind legs and the tail.
This is called a piebald deer or sometimes a piebald white-tailed deer. The color variation seen here occurs naturally in the wild, but statistics say that this variation only occurs in 1 out of 100 births. They are often seen with a pale-colored nose and light-colored eyes, and are very shy like all deer. Females are reported to have larger blots of light-brown along their heads and limbs and mid-back, but with smaller dots along the lower back and ankles. But makes are reported to have larger patches of brown and a smaller amount of dots on their bodies than females do. The pelt of a piebald fawn darkens slightly as it becomes an adult.
~during the 2013 Christmas advent, users received a new species that were both reindeer and normal-looking deer. I want to point out that the Piebald Deer I suggested would be for that species.~