Friendly editorial pet infographic featuring a centered watercolor rabbit portrait, tidy comparison-card panels, soft dividers, and labeled care callouts. Designed with a warm natural palette and clean magazine styling, it also supports search relevance for cockapoo growth chart in pounds.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Pet care infographic titled "Rabbit Breed Profile Card". BREED PROFILE CARD archetype. Editorial pet magazine illustration, friendly. Watercolor pet portrait style, warm natural palette. Feature a hero portrait of a rabbit centered prominently, with a clean comparison-card layout suggesting multiple rabbit breed profiles visually without referencing cats. Include 5-8 labeled callouts around the rabbit, each with a short heading in English, a one-line tip in English, and a small icon: "Size" — "Compare adult body size and build at a glance."; "Coat Type" — "Note fur length, texture, and grooming needs."; "Temperament" — "Highlight energy level and handling preferences."; "Ear Shape" — "Show upright or lop ears as a breed clue."; "Lifespan" — "Summarize typical longevity with general care."; "Housing Needs" — "Compare space, enrichment, and exercise needs."; "Grooming" — "Indicate brushing frequency and shedding level."; "Family Fit" — "Show suitability for gentle, supervised homes." Use small matching icons for each callout. Add subtle comparison panels, tidy badges, soft dividers, and infographic structure. Visually hint at search intent with chart-like comparison elements only, with no on-image text about it. No cruelty imagery, no shock-collar or harsh-correction tools, no breed-shaming, veterinary advice only general, no watermarks. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no animal cruelty imagery, no breed-shaming, no watermarks Friendly editorial framing. No cruelty imagery, no shock-collar / harsh-correction tools, no breed-shaming. Veterinary advice stays general — not specific dosing or diagnoses.
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