dannieboiz,
Well, all the colors are natural...it just depends what depth you are comparing the bulb to. As for the blue, it is interesting that you bring that up. I didnt want to get too technical here, but since you brought it up...
Most 10,000Ks have a rather flat curve from the 400-700nm range...lots of little spikes, but nothing crazy. But heres the funny part, a 10,000K usually has just as much purple (420nm spike) as a 20,000K. What makes a 20,000K is that from 480nm to 700nm, the output is much lower, and there is a noticable spike in the 450nm (blue) spectrum. So a 10,000K and 20,000K have the same amount of purple really, its just that the rest of the spectrum covers it up with a 10,000K bulb. This is even true of a 6500K Iwasaki. If you compare spectral graphs, the 6500K has just as much blue and purple as a 10,000K, if not more.....its just the extra green, yellow, and red spectrums that cover it. now, if you look at most of the newer 14,000Ks, even though they have a higher K rating than a 10,000K, its because of their huge blue 450nm spike (and lower warmer K levels). Really, the only difference between a 14,000K and a 20,000K (I have looked at many, but in particular, look at the spectral graph of a pheonix 14,000K compared to a radium 20,000K) seems to be the lack of the purple 420nm spike. A 10,000K has more purple than that (many 10,000Ks have more purple than 20,000Ks in fact...you just dont see it).
I like the look and growth I get with bluer bulbs. The corals just seem to grow just as fast and with more color. To get the same amount of blue with halides, you need at least 1 watt actinic/blue per every 2 watts of 10,000K halide, if not 2 for every 3.