Dark Brown and Light Brown
Well, the color Chestnut is called Chestnut because it looks like Chestnut wood.
You can find chestnut horses at horse breeders, rescue centers, auctions, and private sellers. It's important to research and visit reputable sources to ensure the health and background of the horse before making a purchase.
Not nessecerely, it may be. depending on it's parent's families as well. It could be grey, or chestnut or black. it may also be dark brown.
Well first off colt is a male and Filly is a female...foal is a baby horse. So if you breed a chestnut to a brown horse you would likely get the following chances. 58.34% bay/brown, 33.33% chestnut, and 8.33% black.
In horses liver chestnut is a type of chestnut. So chestnut to chestnut will produce a chestnut foal. The actual shade of chestnut will be controlled by underlying factors that are not well understood.
Well it would depend honestly. I typically like to combine the parents names, or grandparents, it depends on the individual horse.
No. Sweet Chestnut is contained in a capsule with soft spines and roasted , Horse Chestnut is contained in a spherical capsule with sharp spikes and is inedible. Latin genus,Castana hence 'castanets'. To be absolutely correct a roasting chestnut is the seed of Castanea sativa the Spanish Chestnut. Conkers are the seed of 'Aesculus Hippocastanum the Horse Chestnut.
Well there are certain colors that horses cannot be, such as blue, green, purple, etc. There are also arguments over some horse colors and their terms, such as Albino. There is no such thing as an albino horse, this term is often used on Cremellos, Perlinos, and white horses. Some say horses can't be white, but they can be, usually they are a maximally expressed Sabino pinto marked horse.
Palomino. Could also be bay silver or flaxen chestnut.
Lime green goes well.
Red
Red (AKA chestnut) and Black. In the related links you will find a page that can tell you a ton about the red and black genes, as well as how they work with other genes. *Note: it says Morgan horses, but it goes for all breeds*