Feel free to look at our American Paint horses. Register a horse today! (Sorry if I sound like an advert).
About the Breed
Height: 14.2-16 hands high.
Colors: black, bay, brown, sorrel & grey, also palomino, buckskin, cremello, perlino, pearl, champagne, roan, or dun. They always have Pinto patterns, and are rarely solid colored.
"Paint" and "pinto" are sometimes both used to describe a piebald or skewbald horse, but there is a clear difference between the two terms. A pinto differs from a Paint horse due to bloodlines. A pinto may be of any breed, though some Pinto registries may have additional restrictions. To be registered as a Paint horse at least one of the horse’s parents must be registered as that, and (for real horses) both parents must be registered with the Paint Horse Association, the Quarter Horse Association, or the Jockey Club.
Colors: black, bay, brown, sorrel & grey, also palomino, buckskin, cremello, perlino, pearl, champagne, roan, or dun. They always have Pinto patterns, and are rarely solid colored.
"Paint" and "pinto" are sometimes both used to describe a piebald or skewbald horse, but there is a clear difference between the two terms. A pinto differs from a Paint horse due to bloodlines. A pinto may be of any breed, though some Pinto registries may have additional restrictions. To be registered as a Paint horse at least one of the horse’s parents must be registered as that, and (for real horses) both parents must be registered with the Paint Horse Association, the Quarter Horse Association, or the Jockey Club.