It is a coat coloration called "roan," just like in horses. Cattle can also come in a blue roan, which is a "blend" of black and white hairs.
Red and white make pink.
Shorthorns can be all red, all white, or red with white hairs in with the red hairs (called a roan coloration).
A roan bull and a roan cow can indeed breed to have red and white cattle. This is due to alleles mixing.
The question itself is very ambiguous, since white-faced cattle are mainly identified not by coat colouration, but by breed due to colouration. In general, though, white-faced cattle can be called white-faced or baldy. The breeds and cross-breeds that have white-faces or are distinguished by a white face are as follows:Baldies, for cross-bred commercial cattle comprised of mainly Hereford-cross cattle or Simmental-cross cattle where the white face is a dominant trait--called either Red White Face (RWF) or Black White Face (BWF) Cattle can also be Grey White Face or Yellow White FaceHerefords (polled and horned) for purebred and straight-bred Hereford cattle;Black Herefords, completely separate from the Hereford breed.SimmentalsSimmental-FleckviehMontbeliard cattle (also known as French Dairy Simmental), which are considered a part of the Simmental breed;Groningen White-headedSimbrahBrafordBeefmakerHays ConverterBelmont AdapteurSimAngusHintewald
Herefords.
some traits blended together
some traits blended together
shorthorn
"Red Angus"
No. They only come in black and white or red and white. Black and white is the most common colouration of Holsteins.
The cross that will produce only horned Roan offspring in cattle is the red bull with the white cow. However, these offspring would be able to create either red, white, or Roan.
The blending of the phenotype of the parents in the offspring is known as incomplete. colors of flowers can show incomplete dominance if a red flower is crossed with a white flower and their offspring are pink.