Yes there are many color charts for horses. Here's one below.
Horses are different colors because different kinds of horses are naturally different in color. Some horses were also bred to be certain colors.
Color charts typically organize colors in a systematic way, such as by grouping them into shades, tones, or hues. The order of colors in a color chart generally follows the visible spectrum, moving from warm colors like red and orange to cool colors like blue and green. Some color charts may also arrange colors by their primary, secondary, or complementary relationships.
yes but it's very limited. They see certain colors as some other color. Like blue tends to look purple to them. They can see green also. But most other colors look grey.
black white brown
This statement is false. Color breeding does not work that way with horses. Color inheritance is all based on genetic code. 'Brown' can be any color to a layman with no knowledge of horse colors and can cover everything from bay to chestnut. White could be grey, white, cremello etc. Some of these colors are dominate and others recessive.
Andalusian horses can be found in various colors, including gray, bay, black, and chestnut. Gray is the most common color for this breed. Palominos and duns can also be seen in some Andalusian horses.
Animals, including humans, have "rods and cones" in the eye that allow them to see color. Horses have some, but not as many as humans, so it is believed that they see color, but pastels. These colors would be associated with food, water, and blood.
some colors that go in the color blue are red.green, but especially black. some colors that go in the color blue are red.green, but especially black.
No you can not. Some rocks change colors, and some are the same rock but there're diffrint colors' and some are diffrent rock but same color.
Combinations of colors that are considered satisfying are referred to as "color harmonies" or "color schemes." Some common color harmonies include complementary colors (opposite on the color wheel), analogous colors (next to each other on the color wheel), and monochromatic colors (different shades of the same color).
"A roan is a color of horse, so some horses are roan, but the color of a horse depends highly upon the breed of horse. It is possible to determine the color of a foal before he/she is born by comparing the coats of the dam (mother) and the sire (father), also by looking at the previous foals of each." Roan is NOT a color. The color of horses does not depend on their breed. Many breeds can have any color at all. Roan is a scattering of white hairs though the body of a horse giving it a "salt and pepper" look. It can happen on any color horse, although it's not going to be as visible on lighter colors like grays or paler palominos.
Some color charts have more colors then others, but you can always remember R.O.Y G. B.I.V. Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet. Here are the colors in a color wheel: Yellow, orange-yellow, orange, red-orange, red, violet-red, violet, blue-violet, blue, blue-green, green, yellow green. Other color wheels look like this: Hope it helped! Probably too much info but . . .