Pinto horses are colored like the paints but have their own breed registry.
Also, pintos are horses of any breed with paint coloring.
The paint (the thing, not the act) = Pintura To Paint a wall/picture = Pintar A Paint Horse = Pinto
A paint horse is a breed of horse, not a different species, so they live 25 to 50 years. Some people say that pinto and paint horses are the same but they are not. A paint horse is a breed of horse, but pinto is a type of coloring, meaning that any breed of horse can be a called pinto horse, as it is the coat pattern, not the breed of the horse, that defines a horse as a pinto horse.
A paint is a breed. A pinto is a coloring. He is a pinto regardless of breed, but he could also be a paint depending on his parents.
pinto is just another word for paint. Like a Pinto horse.
Paint is a breed and buckskin is a color. To get a Paint, both parents must be registered Paints.However if you meant a pinto ( a horse showing one or more of several pinto spotting patterns) then what you would need to do is make sure you breed the buckskin colored horse to a pinto marked horse that is homozygous (dominant) for a pinto gene. Typically the easiest pinto pattern to breed for is tobiano.
A tobaino paint is a type of coloured breed of a horse I think. Tobiano is a type of marking that can be found on pinto marked horses and within the Paint horse breed.
Their bloodline and what horse were bread to make them
Pinto is a color not a breed of horses. There is a Pinto Horse Association which can include any breed. The American Paint Horse Association includes only horses with Quarter Horse, Paint Horse, or Thoroughbred bloodlines. So a 'Pinto' is a white and any other color in 'patches' of any breed, while a 'Paint' is white and any other color in 'patches' of the Quarter Horse, Paint or Thoroughbred breeds.
paint? but im pretty sure paint is a breed...
Paint horse is a breed. Pinto is the color and most equine breeds have some form of pinto type markings.
The American Paint horse was originally part of the Quarter Horse breed. However horses with pinto markings became undesirable and were not allowed to be registered as Quarter horses. The American Paint Horse Association (APHA) was founded in 1965 to register pinto marked horses with Quarter horse ancestry. The APHA absorbed both the American Paint Quarter Horse Association (APQHA) and the American Paint Stock Horse Association (APSHA.) Both of those registries were around before the APHA. The APHA also allowed in Thoroughbreds with Overo markings.If by chance you mean a pinto horse they have been around for tens of thousands of years, if not more.
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)