Corals care about par. Aquablues or Daylight 10K's have plenty of it. If you used two good 10K T5's I highly doubt the two VHO's are going to make the tank too blue. Standard VHO combination was two super actinics and two actinic whites which was a 12000K VHO and the tank never looked too blue. It made for a crisp white with slight actinic / blue tint. With 2 T5 daylights and slr reflectors you are going to get even more of the white light in the tank. Thats why I listed aquablue T5's as a possibility. They have a very slight blue tint. With two VHO super actinics I would probably start with having ion hand 2 10000K and 2 aquablues or similiar 12000K or so. You could try the UVL Aqua Suns which are 10000K with very good par. Or the UVL actinic white 12000K or Giesemann aquablue which i believe is 11000K.
If you want a warmer look then maybe T5 Midday type bulb which is, I believe, around 6000K. You are going to have to play around to find combination that you like. But two T5 10000K daylights and two super actinic VHO's are not going to give you a blue tank. You may think so because you are skeptical on how much light the T5 reflector throws. All I can tell you is that the 4 54 watt T5's with SLR reflectors that I ran visibly whooped up on the 4 110 watt VHO system that I ran for 10 + years beforehand.
Aside from that, the light that is usable to corals is PAR, Photosynthetically active radiation, not what color the bulb is. T5 white bulbs and blue bulbs like the ATI blue + have a load of par for the corals to utilize. For example, a 12000K bulb with a white with blue tint look has nearly the same par as a 6000K ATI sun pro , 336 to 357. The ATI blue plus which is about as blue as it gets isnt far behind with 311. It's really only the T5 super actnics that drop off in par with the UVL brand being the best. Thus the VHO super actinic vs T5 super actinic debate. That is probably the, concensus, only remaining superiority of VHO. Times have changed.