okay so where can i get one of these books and about how much do they cost???
Entire books are written to answer the question you are posing above!! You start with one of 5 e-alleles (extended black, birchen, duckwing, brown, wheaten), then you can add or not silver or gold. Then you can apply a uniform colour changing gene like blue, white (dominant or recessive), lavender, dun, cream, champagne blond, etc. Then there are the colour distribution genes like columbian, mahogany, dilute, melanotic, etc. And finally, you have pattern genes (pattern, cuckoo/barred, mottled.) So as you can see, the combinations and possibilities are virtually limitless.
The other colours don't tend to work like blue. Blue is diluted black. A bird that appears blue carries one copy of the Bl gene (Bl/bl+). Splash is two copies of the Bl gene (Bl/Bl) - true blue. Black is injected back into a blue breeding program when the blue starts to fade. Blue is injected back into splash to keep the spots showing.
White can be dominant (white leghorns), recessive (in Silkies), or due to pigment interuption (cuckoo/barring). With recessive white (Silkies), white has to be bred to white to come up white usually - unless the other bird happens to be hiding recessive white and you get lucky. White can also be hiding unpredicable stuff that will show up when you introduce another colour.
Mixing colours other than blue is often unpredictable and depends entirely on what you are throwing into the mix.