Do you have a picture in better lighting? this pic is too dark to be sure. Likely silver black, but the picture is too dark to be sure.I was asked what colour Jasmine is and I wasn't sure what to tell them either! I thought a silver palomino was probably the closest, but what is she correctly called?
Right - A lot of vets really don't know color at all. I'm lucky - my vets all know what a genetics junkie I am and defer to my labeling, since I've been mixed into the color genetics world for so long. I try to help people get out of the habit of calling this color chocolate and/or chocolate palomino. There are to many disparate colors that people label that way that don't have anything to do with each other genetically speaking. My Silver black Welsh mare is registered as "silver cream" though she doesn't have a cream gene, nor does silver show up on a red base coat, as cream would. Plus, she doesn't even look like a silver black that carries cream would, as they get that "wet brown paper bag" color to them because of the dampening effect cream has on silver's expression. So while you can't tell when a black has a cream gene, you often can tell when a silver black does. The mane and tail will often be self colored instead of a frosty Ombre, and their hide will be more uniformly "mud brownish" rather than sepia/gunmetal/pewter/dove/putty colored.Yup 100% silver dapple pinto (tobiano pattern). Looks like he has some lacing on his back as well. A lot of people call them chocolate palominos which is not a genetics term. Unfortunately a lot of vets are not well versed in horse color genetics).
Jasmine is also a silver black/black silver - either is correct. Silver palomino would be considered an incorrect term, genetically speaking, because silver will not show on a true palomino (red base with a cream gene), and the cream gene has a dampening effect on the expression of the silver gene, changing the frosty ash Ombre mane and tail to more self colored, and the body to a wet paper bag color.I was asked what colour Jasmine is and I wasn't sure what to tell them either! I thought a silver palomino was probably the closest, but what is she correctly called?
The mare is a silver dapple pinto and the stallion is a red pinto. Both appear to have the tobiano pattern but I’d test to be sure. Particularly if you breed them. Don’t want to change a LWO foal.Thank you for this post. I have been wondering what my mare was and thought maybe grulla. I now think she’s a silver dapple pinto tobiano. What color is my stallion? Chestnut pinto tobiano?
Brown and white, grey and white and buckskin and white. None of which seems to be rightSo what colors has he been called? I'm just curious who said what?
As already stated, he's silver black (silver dapple), likely tobiano.
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