In Italy, where the Livorno
breed standard is recent, ten
colour varieties are recognised; there is a separate Italian standard for the German Leghorn variety, the Italiana (). The Fédération Française des Volailles (the French poultry federation) divides the breed into three types: the or American Leghorn, in white only; the or English Leghorn, in six colours; and the or Italian type, for which twenty-one colour variants are listed for full-size birds, and nineteen for bantams. In the United States ten colours – white, red, black-tailed red, light brown, dark brown, black, buff, Columbian, buff Columbian and silver – are recognised for single-combed large fowl, of which six are also recognised for rose-combed birds; colours for bantams are the same, with the addition only of single-combed barred. In Britain, the Leghorn Club recognises eighteen colours: golden duckwing, silver duckwing, partridge, brown, buff, exchequer, Columbian, pyle, white, black, blue, mottled, cuckoo, blue-red, lavender, red, crele and buff Columbian. The
comb is usually single; a rose comb is permitted in some countries, but not in Italy. The legs are bright yellow, and the ear-lobes white. The Italian standard gives a weight range of for cocks, for hens. According to the British standard, full-grown Leghorn cocks weigh and hens ; for bantams the maximum weight is for cocks and for hens. Ring size for large fowl is for cocks and for hens; for bantams it is and respectively. == Use ==