Laced Brahmas
What is Lacing?
Lacing means a single dark or light outline around each feather, creating a bold edge. In Brahmas it results from Pattern (Pg), Melanotic (Ml), and Columbian restriction (Co) layered on a coloured base. Unlike penciling, which produces multiple arcs, lacing forms one uniform band. By changing the pigment at the feather edge (black, blue, or white), different laced varieties appear.
Laced Brahmas - visual guide
Lacing is a single dark or light outline around each feather (not to be confused with penciling’s multiple arcs). In Brahmas, it’s built by layering Pattern (Pg), Melanotic (Ml), and Columbian restriction (Co) on a coloured base. Changing the pigment at the feather edge (black → blue → white) creates the major laced varieties.
How lacing is built
Base colour + Pg + Ml + Co (+ optional diluters)Black Laced Gold
s+ + Pg Ml CoClassic lacing; select for sharp, even edges.
White Laced Red
s+ + Pg Ml Co + ICrisp white outline; rarer project colour.
Blue Laced
s+ + Pg Ml Co + Bl/bl+Softer contrast than black; incomplete dominance.
Buff Laced
buff base + Pg Ml Co + ISeen in other breeds (e.g., Polish); experimental in Brahmas.
Silver Laced
S + Pg Ml CoCommon in Wyandottes; project colour in Brahmas.
Breeding Notes
- Lacing requires the trio Pg + Ml + Co; without them, feathers revert to penciling or solid colour.
- Black lacing expresses when sufficient pigment is present.
- Dominant White (I) blocks black at the edges → white lacing.
- Blue (Bl) dilutes black at the edges → slate blue lacing.
- Maintaining sharp, even outlines needs strict selection; lacing can blur or thicken easily without careful breeding.