Last month I had a litter of 6 to my charlie(whom I thought was Hemi but with white feet) and A chinchilla
Ah, are these the ones you posted earlier in a different thread? Is the "charlie" the one with pink eyes, the broken Himalayan?
That litter had a solid agouti, a good broken and 4 seemingly REW
It's almost impossible on a broken himi to see what the broken pattern would have looked like, how much color she would have had, if the spots were not white spots on a white coat. According to the odds, out of thousands of breedings, the odds are a broken x solid breeding would give you half broken and half solid. You may still have that, as any of the REWs could be broken, and there would be no way to tell, except to see if they throw broken kits when bred to a solid mate.
But, Lady Luck rarely runs according to the odds. Sometimes, the longshot horse wins the race. Odds are close to 50/50 that a litter of rabbits will be about half male, half female. But I often have litters that are all male, or all female. The Punnet square simply tells you what the odds are that an individual kit will be a certain color, and tells you what colors they cannot be. Seeing what you actually get is usually a surprise.
Seeing that your litter had solids told you that the broken himi is not a Charlie broken himi, but
En en broken. Since you had REW kits, you know both she and the buck carry recessive albino 'c'. So the chinchilla is
c(chd) c, and she is
c(h) c. REW has been described as a mystery rabbit with a white sheet over it, you can't tell the rest of the rabbit's genetics by looking at it, because albino 'c' turns off the pigment factories, turns off the printer ink--so you can't see what color would otherwise have been printed. Albino white isn't really a color of its own, instead it's like when your printer ink clogs up, and no ink comes out of the nozzle and onto the paper--the paper comes out blank. The printer went through all the motions of what should have been on it, but without ink you can't see what it tried to print. Albino is like that, we can't see what colors nature would have printed if the ink hadn't been shut off.