Ugh, now it's stuck in my head.
A well-known mythological critter, Josephine was a centaur. Her skin on her human-half was a fair form of sunkissed - sunteased perhaps! - with just a dusting of tiny freckles. Her hair was kept long and flowing along her shoulders, fittingly mane-like, billowing in galloping waves that appeared black at a glance, but were truly a rich, dark auburn. An exotic tiara of ivy was perched there atop her head, nestled betwixt a pair of often-perked equine ears, furred a matching hue to her hair. Such ornamentation trailed into whimsical weaves of wisteria and pink foxglove, adding fantastical colours to contrast those locks. Her eyes were a vivid emerald, and their colour was all the accentuation they needed, the centaur going without any forms of makeup or painting to otherwise adjust her features -- a small nose, and a slender, feminine jawline.
Unsurprisingly, her entire equine half shared the same colour as her hair. The fur likewise shone in the sun and trailed to a long, silky-haired tail where that lovely auburn changed slowly to a rather stark black, trailing similarly down her legs where that black appeared again by her fetlocks over her hooves. Her frame as a whole was sleek with youth but well-muscled, defined enough to suggest a life of at least some labour, and plenty of running.
She did wear clothing, with a preference for things light and concealing. A pashmina shawl the colour of chocolate draped along her human half, almost cape-like in the back and concealing the fair swell of her breasts, hanging to nearly navel level on her upper body. A similar garment was strewn along her equine half, this one in dark, ivy green. It was heavier, a bit quilt-like, and patterned all throughout by a gradient of leaves - starting rich and verdant by its back, trailing to autumnal and fiery, and ending finally in a rich, earthy brown that joined rather well with where the heavier garment ended and the lighter one above began. This clothing over her equine half also hung low, but was shaped rather angularly; enough to hide most of her belly and hindlegs ( but not quite low enough for a trip hazard ), angling steadily higher until it appeared as little more than a skirt-like piece at the join of her human and horse halves, fastened there by a beautiful -- but simple -- brooch of gold. Beyond that, most of her jewelry appeared handcrafted, including a wooden knotwork bracelet on her right wrist, and another on her front left hoof.
All together, she stood nearly eight feet tall, from hoof to the top of her head, which wasn't nearly as imposing as it seemed given her dimensions and body shape.