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These horses are usually called cremello, perlino, or smoky cream.
Similarly, horses with a bay base coat and the cream gene will be buckskin or perlino.
Their points are substantially darker than those of a perlino, and they have champagne skin and eye traits.
When combined with cream dilution, may produce horses that appear to be cremello or perlino.
Perlino: similar to a cremello, but is genetically a bay base coat with two dilute genes.
The colors most commonly associated with this genotype are cremello, perlino, and smoky cream.
A cremello, perlino or smoky cream is called "white" or kvit.
The terms "cremello champagne", "perlino champagne" and so forth are also acceptable.
Conversely, double copies of the cream gene create very light-colored horses (cremello, perlino, and smoky cream).
Variants of seal brown include dark buckskin, perlino, seal brown dun, and sable champagne.
A horse with rosy-pink skin and blue eyes in adulthood is most often a cremello or a perlino, a horse carrying two cream dilution genes.
This colour is called "kvit" ("white") in Norwegian, and is known as cremello, perlino or smoky cream in other breeds.
The AQHA later replaced the word "albino" with "cremello or perlino," and in 2002 the rule was removed entirely.
The actual horse may carry additional genetic modifiers that could make it bay, buckskin, gray, bay roan, perlino, silver bay, and so on.
Less common colors include gray, roan, dun, silver dapple, and cream dilutions such as palomino, buckskin, cremello and perlino.
(The AQHA also would not register Appaloosa, cremello or perlino horses for similar reasons.)
Visually, the horse may be any color other than the cream dilute shades of palomino, buckskin, smoky black, cremello, perlino, smoky cream, and so on.
Colors produced include Palomino, Buckskin, Perlino, Cremello and Smoky Cream or Smoky black.
Sometimes this designation includes the bay family: bay, seal brown, buckskin, bay dun, silver bay, perlino, amber champagne, and bay roan.
The base colors recognized by the Appaloosa Horse Club include bay, black, chestnut, palomino, buckskin, cremello or perlino, roan, gray, dun and grulla.
Other colors seen less commonly include the Appaloosa and paint patterns and solid colors such as grulla, buckskin, palomino, cremello, isabella, roan and perlino.
Because the genetic mechanism that creates palomino is also understood and has been found to have no connection to lethal white, cremello and perlino coat colors are also allowed.
Smoky Cream: Virtually indistinguishable from a cremello or perlino without DNA testing, a horse with a black base coat and two copies of the cream gene.
Visually, such horses are black, seal brown, bay, buckskin, perlino or smoky cream, bay dun or grullo, silver bay or silver black.
The dialect on Pantelleria is so distinct that one of my consort's assistants from Milan, Elena Perlino, acknowledged that she was struggling to process what she heard.