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"Teddy Bear" is a term that's been used by a few breeders over the past several years (that I know of anyway) to ID keets that have a mottled/blended head and body coloring, rather than the normal distinctive 2 tone stripes that have traditionally been used to ID keets at hatch. Most of them have a very wide head stripe with only a thin tan outline, instead of the typical fully pearled keet head markings. They feather out normal as they get feathers in and then molt, and other than the remaining head markings you can't tell them apart from the normal version of the same colored keet. As adults there are no differences at all.
Usually, in my hatches the "Teddy Bears" have all been Pied to some degree, the majority being only slightly Pied, making most of their body one dark shade of brown, no stripes. The term was coined for these brown colored keets that feathered out as Pearl Greys because they are brown all over at hatch....I'm guessing because they look like little Teddy Bears"
. I was told back when I first questioned how and why it happens that if you had both Pearl Greys and Royal Purple in your breeding flock that somehow the 2 color genes mixed and produced these "Teddy Bear" looking keets. But it happens with Lavenders, Lite Lavenders, Buff Dundottes and Browns too in my hatches... so IMO that theory went right out the window. I have yet to read or hear a professional breeder's opinion or theory on why/how it happens.
Here's a few examples of my Teddy Bear Pearl Grey keets (you can see the mottled/blended body colors and wider solid head stripes, except on the really Pied keet that's sporting a narrow widow's peak):
And yes, Lite Lavender is a dilute of the normal Lavender, they are shade or 2 lighter... a pale silver at hatch, as opposed to darker grey like a regular Lavender keet, and they feather out much lighter. The Lite Lavenders supposedly
do carry both the tan and blue genes.
I know this pic does nothing as far as explaining the Lite Lavender color genetics, but here's 2 Lite Lavenders with 2 regular Lavenders for color comparison: