Yes actually there is because i have one. I have 68 breyer horses and 7 real horses.
There is the Creamsicle Palomino Spotted Draft Foal Model Horse, and there is the Breyer American Cream Draft Horse. They can both still be bought.
Palomino and pinto are coats. You cannot tell which horse is better just by coats.
icelandic horses are commonly chestnut, dun, bay, black, gray, palomino, pinto and roan
Colour varies wildly in wild horses, from black to red to dun to palomino to piebald to pinto and everything in between.
Palomino is a color and quarter horses are breeds. So the price of a palomino Quarter Horse may be vastly different than a palomino Saddlebred. I actually have one too! Some are for free and some can be a lot! It depends on what they do and if they show what they usually place and classes they're in. Also who bred them and the temperament and a lot more!
Pinto is a color, not a breed and therefore does not have a single height definition. The pinto patterns appears in many breeds from tiny miniature horses all the way up to massive draft horses. That means that a pinto can be of any height.
Pinto horses range from miniature horse size to nearly the size of the largest draft breeds. In addition to the above answer, Pinto is a type of marking/coloration and does not affect a horses size, therefore a pinto can be any size.
Pinto is a color not a breed. Paint horses are a breed of pinto marked horses. So therefore a pinto colored horses habitat will vary considerably.
That would be the Gypsy horse also called a Tinker horse depending on geography and the type of people. The gypsy is a cross between pinto marked horses and draft horses. A Gypsy horse is just a pinto draft horse with lots of feathering and thick manes and tails.
A little of both. Palomino is a color that is seen in several different breeds. Quarter Horses, Paints, American Saddlebreds, half Arabs, and very rarely, Thouroghbreds can have the golden color of Mr. Ed. So you can see that these horses are not the same breed but can be have the palomino colored coat. Palomino is also what is known as a 'color breed'. This means that different breeds of horses, like the ones listed above, can be registered as Palomino. No breed is refused as long as he/she has the palomino coat. An similar example would be a Paint and Pinto. Paint is a breed, Pinto is a color pattern, accepted in different breeds. But as long as your horse meets the color requirements, your Paint can be double registered as a Pinto. Depending on the area that you live in, there are shows held for color breeds. Keep in mind if you plan to attend and participate in a color breed show that the judging will be different than at a regular breed show, such as a Quarter Horse show. Your palomino Quarter Horse (just an example) will be competing against, maybe half Arabs, some gaited horses, ect. Basically these are 'open' shows and the judge can't follow the rule of ideal breed type.
That would be a pinto, which is the Spanishword for "paint".A horse with a golden body and white mane and tail is Palomino in color, not pinto. Pinto is a pattern.
Pinto is a type of coloring/marking found in many breeds and types of horses. That means that pinto horses can live most anywhere.