Palomino is a Non silver carrier:
29.17% -Buckskin
29.17% -Bay
16.67% -Palomino
16.67% -Chestnut
4.17% -Smoky Black
4.17% -Black
Palomino is a Heterozygous (nZ) Silver Carrier:
16.67% - Palomino
16.67% - Chestnut
14.58% - Silver Buckskin
14.58% - Silver Bay
14.58% - Buckskin
14.58% - Bay
2.08% - Smoky Black
2.08% - Silver Smoky Black
2.08% - Silver Black
2.08% - Black
Palomino is Homosygous Silver Carrier:
29.17% -
Silver Buckskin29.17% -
Silver Bay16.67% -
Palomino16.67% -
Chestnut4.17% -
Silver Smoky Black4.17% -
Silver Black
There is no way of deteriming the exact color of the foal. The foal has a 50 % Chance of being born Palomino, 25% cremello and 25% sorrel. The foal regardless of the base color will have a 50 50 shot at being born painted.
In the related links you will find a link to a Foal Color Calculator. You enter in your horses coat color, whether it is tobiano, overo, or tovero, along with some genotyipical things, like whether she is homozygous or heterozygous for the spooted pattern that she is. (but there is an unknown place to mark if you don't know his and her genotype)
This is what my research said, but since you didn't add whether the mare was tovero, tobiano, or overo, or whether she was brown and white, or bay and white, nor did you add the genotypical stuff, it may not be as acurate as it could be:
14.58% -
Buckskin Tobiano
14.58% -
Buckskin
14.58% -
Bay Tobiano
14.58% -
Bay
8.33% -
Palomino Tobiano
8.33% -
Palomino
8.33% -
Chestnut Tobiano
8.33% -
Chestnut
2.08% -
Smoky Black Tobiano
2.08% -
Smoky Black
2.08% -
Black Tobiano
2.08% -
Black
In the above results, I said that she was a bay heterozygous tobiano, because tobiano is a very common paint color, and I figured she was probably bay, not brown. You will have to go to the link and redo it if I am incorrect.
Below you can see what might happen if she is a bay homozygous tobiano:
29.17% -
Buckskin Tobiano
29.17% -
Bay Tobiano
16.67% -
Palomino Tobiano
16.67% -
Chestnut Tobiano
4.17% -
Smoky Black Tobiano
4.17% -
Black Tobiano
As you can see, if she is homozygous spoted, the foal WILL be spotted.
However, if she is not actually bay but is indeed brown, or if she is not tobiano but overo or tovero instead, this all changes, so I suggest you redo it, especially if you know his and her genotypes.
Sorrel is a shade of chestnut and chestnut is dominent so the chance of the foal being a chestnut are much better than a palomino. Of course most aspects of genetics is not %100.
Actually, in this case the genetics is quite straight forward.
Chestnut is ee (homozygous recessive at the extension site)
Palomino is a horse that is chestnut, ee with one copy of the cream gene.
We don't know what the genetics of either horse is at the Agouti site but the alleles at that site will not be expressed.
So the mare is ee and the stallion is eeCrcr.
50% chance of a palomino foal and 50% chance of a sorrel/chestnut foal.
This will depend more on what shade of dun the mare is. Is she a true dun or really a buckskin? Many people get these two colors confused easily. Most likely however you will get a dilute foal like a dunskin.
Well, without knowing the exact color genetics of each horse there is no way to give a one hundred percent accurate answer. However if the stallion is truly bay and the mare is palomino you stand a roughly 32.81% chance of getting either a buckskin or bay colored foal, a 12.50% chance of either a palomino or chestnut color, or a 4.69% chance of a smoky black or black colored foal. These percentages are not 100% accurate though as I said before the exact color genetics of each parent is unknown.
Well the foal could be palomino, or more likely buckskin colored.
The exact color will depend on each parents exact genetic code, you could get a palomino , bay, chestnut, black, buckskin, orsmoky black.
White maybe?
Yes, you can because brown primer isn't that dark of a color.
To make tan out of white and dark brown paint, add the white paint to the brown. Add the white slowly stirring the paint well. Keep adding the white until you get the tan color that you want.
brown and white
White with another color, usually black or brown
palomino
Brown and white, with possibly a bit of yellow will make toffee.
The tail is white. Then the rest of the horse should be a light golden brown so mix white, yellow and brown together.
the paint horse is a quarter horse. they are colored like brown and white, black and white. buckskin and white, any color that a horse is, with white.
there are two types of paint horses overo and torbino an overo paint has more white than color a tobiano has less white an more color
If you mix peach and brown together as in paint you will probabally get a kind of light brown colour.
Light and the sky = white Color/paint = poop colored brown