yes, it is a creamy sort of colour . it is a bit like palamino (cream body with a white mane and tai).l
Cremello is a color dilute gene that changes the base coat color of a horse to a lighter shade in utero. Grey is a color modifier meaning it causes the base color of the horse to slowly lighten to a white color over time after the foal has been born.
Most likely you would get a light horse with either blue eyes or black eyes. It would matter though because, to be specific, there is no such thing as a white horse. Any horse that is grey or anything lighter than grey, unless cremello, is called grey, even if it has white mane/tail and a complete white body. To tell the difference between cremello and grey would be they eyes, with cremello being blue and and grey being black. Also, nostrils, genitals and any other place where there is no hair and skin shows, will be pink on cremello. On grey, those hairless places can be black or mottled. But to answer your question, it would either be cremello or white/grey, nowhere in between.
From me looking at Cremello horse family trees, i just depends on luck I guess
A cremello coat color is out of pure luck. You can a have any color parents and still come out with any other color. Hope this helps!
The common term for the gene/allele that causes a genetically chestnut horse to be a palomino or cremello is Dilution. A palomino has one of these alleles, a cremello has two.
No.... albino horses have no pigmentation at all, and this often makes their eyes red, and they are normally white. Cremello horses are like more a creamy colour, and have blue eyes( generally) There has never been a verified albino horse. The gene is though to not exist in horses.
Still unsure! Whitherton on Rider Isle! BarbaroLady from Cremello Server on Horse Isle and Yola from Cremello!
Horse Isle Answer: MetricCrimsonTears -Cremello Server
Cremello
cremello, it looks like aVERY pale palimino!
Palomino is a color and not a breed. Palomino's came into being when a cremello(Dilute color) horse bred with a chestnut colored horse, thus creating a palomino colored foal. The color was favored throughout the centuries and promoted by queens and kings.
Mochachino.