Cream
A cream crested gecko is described by the pale cream, ivory, butter, or yellow-white color in its pattern or body tone. In Correlophus ciliatus, cream is often seen on flames, harlequins, pinstripes, and other patterned animals, where it contrasts against brown, red, orange, olive, or dark bases. Some geckos show only small cream highlights along the dorsal area or limbs, while others carry broad creamy patches across the sides and back.
Cream is a color descriptor, so it should not be assumed to breed as a simple stand-alone gene. Lines selected for bright, clean cream may produce more consistent offspring, but young animals can change as they mature and may look different when fired up or fired down. Keepers do not need special care for the color itself. Good nutrition, appropriate humidity cycles, and low-stress housing help a gecko show its natural condition, while harsh lighting or warm enclosures can cause unnecessary stress in this cool-tolerant, nocturnal species.
Colors: Axanthic, Bicolor, Brindle, Cappuccino, Cream, Cream-On-Cream, Dalmatian, Dark, Dashed Pinstripe, Empty Back, Extreme Harlequin, Flame, Harlequin, Lavender, Lily White, Moonglow, Orange, Partial Pinstripe, Patternless, Phantom, Pinstripe, Porthole, Red, Sable, Super Dalmatian, Tiger, Tricolor, White Wall, Yellow