Like most extinct, prehistoric animals, the only evidence of saber toothed cats are bones. Without preserved skin and fur, we can't determine the color of any saber toothed cats. However, because there were so many species of saber toothed cats, they probably came in a variety of colors.
they are the colors of a tiger but without the black strips.
Yellow
It is light brown in its upper body and white in its underbelly
It was light brown on its upper body and white in its under belly
No one really knows.
They've been exctinct for so long that all that remains are fossils, and fossils don't retain color.
They had creamy coloured skin
white white
White
Cats did not evolve from sabertoothed tigers. Rather, sabertoothed cats evolved from other cats. Modern apes evolved from miocene apes, which were somewhat similar. Miocene apes evolved from some lemur-like primate, or perhaps something like a lorise. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loris
Sabertoothed tiger
sabertoothed tigers.
Cats are many different colors, but not always. There are completely black or white cats, for sure. There are also solid color cats of many different colors.
colors '
What colors can cats see? Cats primarily see muted shades of blue-violet and yellow-green but are unable to perceive red, orange, and brown
Cats can indeed see some colors, but not all colors. Research has found that cats have colour-sensitive cones in their eyes, but not as many as a human's. Humans with normal vision have 3 types of cones, while dogs and cats have only 2 types of cones so they do not experience the same spectrum of colour vision that we do. Cats seem to be able to distinguish between higher frequency colors, meaning cats respond to the colors purple, blue, green and possibly yellow range. Red, orange and brown colors appear to fall outside cats color range and are most likely seen as shades of grey or purple. Purple, blue and green appear to be the strongest colors perceived by cats. Tests suggest cats can distinguish between more shades or levels of gray than can humans.
Orange, white and black usually, and they have them in distinct patches, unlike tortoiseshell cats, whose colors are blended together.
Cats can see greens and blues, but not most other colors.
maroon
i have a grey and brown one but there are many colors
Cats can be so many different colors that it is hard to list. There are gray cats, black cats, white cats, brown cats, golden cats, cream-colored cats, rose-colored cats, and even blue cats! Then there are the cats that have mixtures, like the stripped tabby, the patched calico, or the torbie, a mixture of both. Different breeds of cats can have even stranger patterns. For example, the Siamese and Himalayan breeds tend to be a cream color with darker patches on their face, ears, paws, and tail.