Japanese Dutch
Japanese Dutch is another name used for the Tri-Colour Dutch or Harlequin Dutch, a rabbit that combines Dutch markings with harlequin coloration. Instead of the simple black-and-white look many people expect from Dutch rabbits, these animals show the Dutch blaze, collar, saddle, and stops alongside orange or fawn and darker harlequin tones. The breed has roots in Dutch and Harlequin breeding and is recognized in British fancy usage, while United States recognition is more limited.
Breeding Japanese Dutch rabbits is a markings project first. The rabbit needs recognizable Dutch patterning, but the colored areas also need the broken-up harlequin effect that gives the variety its name. That makes pet-quality animals common, because a small shift in blaze, saddle, cheek color, or foot stop can move an otherwise attractive rabbit away from the standard. Owners should not assume every harlequin-colored rabbit with white patches is Japanese Dutch; body type and pattern layout both matter.
Colors: Agouti, Albino, Black, Blue, Broken, Charlie, Chestnut, Chinchilla, Chocolate, Cream, Fawn, Harlequin, Himalayan, Lilac, Lynx, Magpie, Marten, Opal, Orange, Otter, Pointed White, Red, Sable, Seal, Squirrel, Tortoise, Tri-Color, Vienna Marked, White