Twiggy appears 68 times at rank 1,552 on female pets — named after the 1960s British supermodel who defined the Swinging Sixties look, and possibly also used as a descriptor for thin or slight dogs. Either reading produces the same name, which is efficient.
The Model Reference
Twiggy, born Lesley Lawson, became one of the most recognizable faces of the 1960s fashion world with her pixie cut and dramatically thin frame. The name carries that mod-era, London-fashion-week aesthetic and appeals to owners drawn to vintage British cool. It suits dogs with a slight, elegant build: Whippets and Italian Greyhounds are the natural physical match for the reference. A lean, graceful dog named Twiggy is the complete embodiment of the name.
The Descriptive Angle
Some Twiggys in the registry are almost certainly named for physical appearance rather than the model — slender dogs, greyhound types, or puppies who arrived looking particularly slight. This descriptive origin doesn't undercut the name; it gives it an additional layer of honest observation. Like naming a dog Tiny, there's charm in a name that's also a physical fact.
Sound and Vintage Appeal
TWIG-ee has a playful ending that softens the harder opening consonant. It calls well and has an undeniable retro-cute quality that fits the cottagecore and vintage aesthetic currently popular in pet naming. The human connection at /names/twiggy is effectively a mononym; the model used it exclusively. On a pet, that singularity is a plus.
