A long time ago, I posted a piece on the potential origins of a Geordie riposte to unanswerable questions from children: "sky blue pink with a finny haddy border" (here). My grandparents moved from Gateshead to London in the 1930s, so for my mother to have known it so completely and transplanted this saying to Aotearoa New Zealand, I think it must date from the 1930s or earlier.
Since then I have had a number of people leave comments on that original post, detailing their local variances. I thought I would collect together some reader comments and views on the origins and local variants of this saying. They are many and varied, and I have decided to list them without editing here. In a follow up post, I will do some analysis on the comments. But first, the list :-)
- Iain C. replied to my original post, recalling their "mother coming out with it in the 50s and we where in Merseyside with no geordie connections. Strange how things got around" (27 December 2019; Young, 2017).
- Another user, Lesley W. (25 June 2023; Young, 2017) related "My father was from Newcastle, but my mum's family were from Southport, Lancs (now Merseyside) and she and my maternal grandparents are the ones who used the phrase 'sky blue pink with spots on and a finny addy border'. My grandparent's use of the phrase suggest it was definitely pre the 40s. Finny addy was there term for smoked haddock, or yellow fish". An interesting comment about the smoked haddock.
- I got a colour variant, a mondegreen, and a verbal shift from one anonymous user (6 February 2020; Young, 2017) who explained "My grandfather was from Scotland (1909-1989) and he used to say this to me as well except it was 'purple' and I never really knew what he was saying at the end with 'finny haddy'. I thought he was saying 'fin and haddie' or even 'thin and fattie'. But it was always the answer to an unimportant or unknown question; 'sky blue purple with a finny haddy border'. Another common quip was 'Haud yer wheesht!'. Also whenever it was pouring rain he was say 'Send 'er down, David; What comes down today won't come down tomorrow'. And of course he also used to riddle me 'Why is a cow? Because a vest has no sleeves'. Crackers, all of these!
- Another anonymous user explained two variants in their family (15 June 2020; Young, 2017) with "interesting that for my grandfather it was 'Sky blue pink with yellow dots', but for my husband [it was] 'sky blue pink with a finny Haddy border' and he comes from Liverpool. Dialectual changes and movement of people must have displaced this phrase and changed it somewhat, but in essen[c]e it remains the same".
- Commenter myfairhands (2 June 2021; Young, 2017) said "My Dad used to say this. He was born and bred in Liverpool. I thought he said finny anny. But it probably handy - as in haddock. He also used to say when surprised by something 'well I'll go to the foot of our stairs'; 'Off goes your head and on goes a cabbage' when we were naughty; And called us in from play with 'come in your mother wants her boots'. So another variant of haddock (an important income stream in the North) with a dropped 'h' and an 'handy' variant; and some lovely sayings (neither of which I have heard before).
- Another anonymous commenter (29 April 2022; Young, 2017) concurred: "Same saying for me too family from Liverpool +Hoylake i lived North wales on the border".
- Commenter Isadora (10 September 2021; Young, 2017) explained "My grandmother was from Liverp[o]ol and used this expression - she said 'finny addy border' but I assume that was laziness. Another of her sayings, uttered if we were slouching about doing nothing, was 'don't be standing about like a pilgarlick' This was often heard from her and we all thought she'd made it up. Then, Frank Muir presented it on 'Call my Bluff' - remember that? We, my sisters and I died laughing until he (Mr Muir) revealed it as the truth!! Archaic, it was apparently as it sounds a tablet or pill made from garlic - an original supplement, maybe a cut above snake oil. We were impressed even though the revelation further diminished the sense of her retort!" Now that is a fascinating view of our language history!
- Another anonymous commenter (26 November 2021; Young, 2017) said "My grandfather, from Birkenhead, used to say that sandy-grey russet was 'the colour of a sunburnt fart'". What a pearl!
- Another anonymous commenter (29 April 2022; Young, 2017) related "My Mum used to say this to us in the 50's. She'd say 'sky blue pink with a finny annie border' (at least that's what I think she said) and as children we never queried it or indeed understood what she meant. Just one of her many 'strange' sayings that I assume came from her parents. She had no connection with Gateshead area - lived in leafy Surrey". This is a widely travelled phrase when we consider I am in New Zealand.
- Another anonymous commenter on the same day (29 April 2022; Young, 2017) noted "We used to say it in Liverpool 1956 to 1966. It was a rhyme in the playground". It must have had an appeal to children to be used in the playground.
- Another anonymous commenter (11 June 2022; Young, 2017) said "My Nan used to say this 'Sky blue pink with a finny addie border.' It was a deflective saying, but I have no idea what it meant! We lived in Birkenhead, Wirral, and I am now 57". So another northern version, this time with a dropped 'h', and from a user born in the 1960s (providing their age was a bonus!).
- Another anonymous commenter (20 July 2023; Young, 2017) took the time to explain this is was "A very common saying in Lancashire[:] if you think it through the sky at sunset is sky blue with pinkish glow and a finny handy (yellow) border if it his been a nice day, so perhaps original was just a real answer to a question that later got used as a non[-]answer as it is such a funny sounding phrase". Yes, all true. Interesting that this user also noted the "handy" variant.
- Another anonymous commenter (11 January 2024; Young, 2017) explained that their variant "from Liverpool is Dan dugady grey with a finny addy border" which is a pearl I have definitely not heard before. I wondered if this might have been a corruption of "Ducati grey"? This user also noted that their age, being 67 at the time (likely now 68), which was helpful, as being born in the 1950s may help to date the phrase.
- Another anonymous commenter (10 April 2024; Young, 2017) said "I’m a Scouser and my Nan used to say sky blue pink with a Finny addy border when I asked a question she didn’t know the answer to or was uncomfortable to answer! She also used the term pilgarnock (mentioned earlier on this thread) when she considered someone was stupid!" I wondered if pillock might be a contraction of pilgarnock? Another time, perhaps.
- Another anonymous commenter (10 April 2024; Young, 2017) related that "In Aberdeen we used to say sky blue pink with a tartan border". Another variant!
- And yet another on the same day (10 April 2024; Young, 2017) explained "The saying [i]n Northern England was Sky Blue Pink with a Yellow Border and not Finni Addy". Another variant, this time with a dropped smoked haddock!
- Another anonymous commenter (17 April 2024; Young, 2017) explained "'Sky blue pink with a finny addy border' [came] from my nan - she was born in Liverpool in around 1915. Finny addy was smoked haddock and as others have said it was a 'mind your own business' reply to an annoying question. Another phrase from her 'Mind you own business and cook your own fish, and don't put your nose in my clean dish'. This was still being used in Liverpool in the 60s and was often abbreviated to 'Mind your own business and cook your own fish'". Another dropped 'h', yet the haddock remains!
- Another anonymous commenter (31 August 2024; Young, 2017) explained "This was a very common used phase in Liverpool throughout the war years and on into the 1960s. 'It can be sky blue pink with a Finny addy border for all I care' was a very common response to any question". An interesting add on with the "for all I care". A bit more dismissive, and less light-hearted.
- Another anonymous commenter (2 February 2025; Young, 2017) said they had "Just Googled Sky Blue Pink with a Finny Haddy Border and found this page. My parents who are mid 80's said this to us as kids and we lived in Wigan with no Liverpool origins. I am 60". So while the saying was common in the 1950s and 1960s, it was also in common usage with their parents generation.
- Another anonymous commenter from further south (29 March 2025; Young, 2017) explained "In Manchester in the 1950's the saying was 'Sky Blue Pink with a Yellow border'"; again, a dropped smoked haddock.
- Commenter scousejones (24 September 2007; Ice-Maiden, 2007) said "when I was a child in the 1920s, a usual answer to the question, 'What colour is it?' would be, 'Sky-blue Pink with a Finny-Haddy border', Finny-Haddy being a smoked haddockfrom Findon in Scotland".
- On the same day, commenter valerieb1254 (24 September 2007; Ice-Maiden, 2007) explained "What we used to say was.....Sky blue pink with yellow dots on. As for the colour of Sky-blue pink, I don't really know".
- Then commenter Aroundy (17 April 2024; Ice-Maiden, 2007) threw in a final pearl: "Sky blue pink shot with a carrot".
I was wondering if the Finny Haddock from Findon in Scotland being yellow came first or second? Perhaps the sky blue pink with a yellow border came first; then the yellow finny 'addy came across the border, so it was a substitution for the yellow...?
Anyway. Some analysis to come later :-)
Sam
References:
Ice-Maiden. (2007, September 24). What colour?. The Answer Bank. https://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Phrases-and-Sayings/Question459921.html
Young, S. (2017, January 2). Sky-blue pink with a Finny Haddy Border. https://www.samyoung.co.nz/2017/01/sky-blue-pink-with-finny-haddy-border.html














