Bay:
Light Bay:
Blood Bay:
Mahogany Bay:
Black Bay:
Pangaré Bay:
Seal Brown:
Wild Bay:
Black:
Chestnut:
Pangaré Chestnut:
Light Chestnut:
Medium Chestnut:
Liver Chestnut:
Flaxen Chestnut:
Bay Dun:
Red Dun:
Grulla:
Buckskin:
Buttermilk Buckskin:
Sooty Buckskin:
Palomino:
Sooty Palomino:
Isabella:
Smokey Black:
Perlino:
Smokey Cream:
Silver Bay Dapple:
Silver Dapple Black:
Amber Champagne:
Sable Champagne:
Classic Champagne:
Gold Champagne:
Dark Gold Champagne:
Double Bay Pearl:
Double Black Pearl:
Apricot Pearl:
Dunalino:
Cream Dun:
Cream Grullo:
Amber Dun:
Sable Dun:
Gold Dun:
Classic Dun:
Amber Cream:
Sable Cream:
Gold Cream:
Double Cream Champagne:
Silver Buckskin:
Silver Smoky Black:
Amber Silver:
Classic Silver:
Gray:
Steel Gray:
Rose Gray:
Dappled Gray:
Light Gray:
Flea Bitten Gray:
White:
Bay Roan:
Red Roan:
Blue Roan:
just pointing out this to people who are confused: the definition of a wild bay is the fact that the black on its legs is lower down, not the shade of brown on the body
Lol
Yes!! I can go on for hours about pasterns/socks/stockings/coronets, etc. (but I will try to be succinct because I feel like it annoys you guys when I keep rambling)
Ikr, wait till you see the post about markings
Woah. Just, woah.
This is the answer google gave me:
Flaxen chestnuts and Palominos can look exactly alike. Sometimes the only way to tell the difference is through their DNA. Palominos have one cream dilution gene, where as chestnuts, even with those lighter manes and tails, don't. For example, Haflingers tend to look Palomino. However, a true Haflinger cannot be Palomino; they are all Flaxen chestnut.
I bet it would! one thing that has always confused me is how can you tell the difference between a dark palomino like this:
versus a flaxen chestnut like this:
Thanks, it took forever to track down pictures of all the different colorings
Lol ya that’s awesome!!!
info overload . . . . but cool