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You'd just get brown eggs, possibly some green in there.
Any normal brown layer crossed with a blue or green layer gives, at the most, a normal green. To truly get the Olive look like in the photo shown above, your "brown" layer MUST be a dark egg layer.
And to answer, yes, dark eggs are indeed a beautiful red color. People like to call them chocolate brown, but honestly I consider them a blood red, the darker they are, the more reminiscent to thick blackened blood, like found near the liver.
You'd just get brown eggs, possibly some green in there.
Any normal brown layer crossed with a blue or green layer gives, at the most, a normal green. To truly get the Olive look like in the photo shown above, your "brown" layer MUST be a dark egg layer.
And to answer, yes, dark eggs are indeed a beautiful red color. People like to call them chocolate brown, but honestly I consider them a blood red, the darker they are, the more reminiscent to thick blackened blood, like found near the liver.