Lavender to Splash Orpington - who's done it, and what were the results?

What does the phrase, "They will be split for lavender" mean? I'm trying to learn more about genetics. TIA!
Lavender is a recessive gene so it takes two copies to show. If a bird has one copy it won't show. You can't tell it has it by looking at the bird.
When a bird carries a recessive gene sight unseen like that its often referred to as being "split" for it.
 
Those are just splashes. Here a splash Cochin for comparison

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My lavender splash English orpington hens lay pink eggs. I have hatched out dozen of their eggs. As I had both a lavender splash roo and a blue orpington roo I could not confirm sire. Now I only have the one English lavender splash roo. I will be gathering their eggs in 20 days and hatch them out to really see what % is. My hens had very pale pink combs for months. Now at over 14 months old they are more red. But the chicks have pale combs like the hens.
 
first pic are my 2 English lavender splash hens. The roo initially had irridescent dark purple splash on him.
The second picture shows a lavender splash hen pullet next to a white breese bred pullet. Pullets are 70 days old here. The splash is definitely not white.
 
first pic are my 2 English lavender splash hens. The roo initially had irridescent dark purple splash on him.
The second picture shows a lavender splash hen pullet next to a white breese bred pullet. Pullets are 70 days old here. The splash is definitely not white.
They aren’t lavender, they’re just splash.
 
Well if they are not lavender why do they have pink eggs and lavender chicks, as well as splash chicks, but no black or blue orpingtons
Post picture of these "lavender" chicks. Splash x Splash equals all splash chicks, so you wouldn't get any blue or black if you bred them. Egg color has nothing to due with feather color.
 
Well if they are not lavender why do they have pink eggs and lavender chicks, as well as splash chicks, but no black or blue orpingtons
Pink eggs aren’t specific to lavenders, and if the chicks look the same as the parents, they’re splash too. Splash x splash shouldn’t produce blues or blacks.
 

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