© Copyright Goldendoodles.com 2001. All rights reserved. You may not copy or otherwise use anything on this site without our written permission.
DOODS & COAT COLOURS
Cream / Gold / Caramel
A cream coloured dog has fur that is darker than chalk dogs, and has some hints of golden
colour in the coat. Ones with a deeper and richer tone would be called golden coloured.
Cream and gold dogs are not always monotone. Oftentimes, there are darker and lighter
areas to their coat.
A caramel coloured dog has a white, cream, apricot, red or yellow coat and a brown nose.
All dogs with an “ee” pair will be Cream (cream means any of the following colors: white,
cream, apricot, red, yellow (as in Labs), golden (as in Goldens)
BBee is a cream dog
Bbee is a cream dog carrying recessive brown
bbee is a cream dog with brown pigment (caramel)
Shades of those basic colours are modified by other genes
Click here for more information on
Coat Colour Basics.
F1 Goldendoodle Winnie at 11weeks and full grown
F1 Goldendoodle Abby at 10 weeks and at 2 years
F1 Goldendoodle Brinkley at 8 weeks and at 10 weeks
F1 Goldendoodle Biscuit at 9 weeks and at 10 months
F1 Goldendoodle Kina at 15 weeks and at 2 years
F1 Goldendoodle Milo at 5 weeks and at 5 months
F1 Goldendoodle Ollie at 8 weeks and full grown
F1 Goldendoodle Freida at 4 weeks and at 13 months
F1 Goldendoodle Yoda as a pup and as an adult
F1 Goldendoodle Chase at 8 weeks and at one year
F1 Goldendoodle Gracie at 10 weeks and at 11 months
F1 Goldendoodle Lucy as a pup and at 11 months
F1b Goldendoodle Harley at 7 weeks and as an adult
Harley is Caramel with a rose/liver nose (from Four Paws Doodles)
Sawyer is a White Chocolate! - he has two chocolate parents and has a rose/liver nose (from
Four Paws Doodles)
[ Sawyer is a bbee cream dog with two bbEe chocolate parents ]
Goldendoodle to Golden Retriever backcross Blue at 5 weeks and at 13 weeks
Multigeneration Labradoodle DaVinci a cream wool pup and as an adult
The information contained on this site is in no way intended to replace that of proper veterinary advice, diagnosis or treatment.
It is meant to provide resource, so that we can better understand canine health related issues.