


RECOGNIZED COLORS:
Blue Silver (Dilute Blue)
Brown Khaki (Dilute Brown)
Ash Red Ash Yellow (Dilute Ash Red)
Black (Spread Blue) Dun (Spread Silver)
Lavender (Spread Ash Red & Ash Yellow) Recessive Red
Recessive Yellow
There will also be a class for AOC, for other factors which
fanciers successfully transfer over to Classic Frills, such
as milky, reduced, opal, etc. It should be noted that these
factors must also have the telltale marks of Oriental
Frills, and that is the Toy Stencil and Frill Stencil
Factors, in combination, so that the same requirements
stated in other parts of the standard are applicable to any
new color factor added to the gene pool.
COLOR NAMES:
Bluette: Blue Bar Satinette
Silverette: Silver Bar Satinette
Brownette: Brown Bar Satinette
COLOR / PATTERN / MARKINGS:
Satinettes are white except for a colored shield and colored
tail (including about half of the rump and the wedge to the
vent). Ash Red birds are to have clear and obvious tail
color and markings (It should he noted that it is most
difficult to achieve the same quality of tail markings in
Ash Red/Ash Yellow birds as in other color varieties). The
shield is laced or barred. Spread birds have a laced tail.
Non-Spread birds have a barred tail with white Moon Spots.
The shield bars are to be White. The inside of the laces on
the shield are to be White. The inside of each Moon Spot is
to be White. The inside of each laced tail feather is to be
White. There should be a clear delineation between the
lacing and the ground color. The bars should be clear, long,
even and narrow. The ideal is 10x 10 white flights, always
with colored thumb feathers. White thumb feathers will be
penalized. 7 to 10 white flights are allowed, with even
numbered flights preferred over odd numbers of flights on
opposing wings. There is to be an even line of demarcation
across the rump between the colored tail and white back.
This line falls about half way between where the wings first
separate and the actual beginning of the tail feathers. An
even line, both top and bottom, is more important than the
actual location of the line on the rump. The same
description applies to the Blondinettes with the exception
that the Blondinette is a whole colored bird and has no
solid white feathers. In Spot tail version of Blondinettes,
usually just the tail and the wings show Toy and Frill
Stencil. In Laced Tailed varieties, the lacing usually
extends over most, if not all of the body--these are usually
the spread factor birds.