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.
Chestnut is not a breed. It is only a colour designation.
it can vary but some times it can be a liver chestnut or a bay or a normal chestnut. the colour could be any but i would suggest you go on a proper horse website
You are likely to get a chestnuty/bay colour I think.
It's Mouse Grey, Flaxen Liver Chestnut, and Dun.
the Highland Pony comes in a variety of colors including. Dun in all it's shades. bay, black, brown, liver chestnut, chestnut, sorrel(Flaxen chestnut), Silver Dapple.
You can't really put a height on that because Sorrel is a colour of horse (a bright red chestnut) and not a breed.
A pinto is a colour, not a breed. this means it can be as big as a shire horse, or as small as a fallabella pony. Pinto is a coat colour of white and chestnut, normally in patches.
No. There are 2 totally different sets of genes that make up these two colors. Champagne is a dilution gene and there is now a test for it. (see Related Links for more information) Liver Chestnut is genetically just chestnut (same color as sorrel) but is visually darker. There are many shades of a red base color but they are still all a red base color. There is no test for Liver Chestnut because, at this time, it is not considered a color at all, but a way to describe a darker red horse. If you breed a gold champagne to a liver chestnut, you can get chestnut, gold champagne, liver chestnut or a darker gold champagne. The chances for Liver or the darker gold champagne is probably less than plain chestnut/sorrel or gold champagne. Chocolate Palomino is also not a "color" but is a word to describe a darker palomino. Could be a sooty gene darkening the palominos appearance. There are other colors that people call chocolate too and they are totally unrelated genetically to the palomino. Silver dapple is the best example.
Palomino isn't a breed of horse, it is a colour. Answer 2: As stated above Palomino is a color, not a breed. The Palomino horse registries are color registries, not breed associations. You get Palomino coloring by breeding a horse with the cream gene to a chestnut and you should get a palomino. Any breed that carries both the cream and chestnut colorings can produce a palomino.
Cherry Chestnut would be a lighter chestnut then the red chestnut but they both basicly are the same.
The Penny Breed. i write stories so i could think of one if i new what colour the mare was.
Assuming you are referring to the horse colors. Liver is a darker form of chestnut and therefore there is no 'cross' between them. The shade of chestnut inherited by a foal is purely genetic.