Hi!
I just made some research that can be very informative. I downloaded a catalog of globular clusters in M31:
http://vizier.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/VizieR?-source=V%2F143In this catalog we have the Johnson B and V magnitudes plus the color excess due to dust reddening. Moreover, it has a flag indicating which clusters have been confirmed to be real clusters. So I filtered only the confirmed clusters which have the three magnitudes. Attached to this message is the histogram of the B-V color index distribution. The median B-V color index of this sample is 0.67 magnitudes, which is very close to a G2V star (0.66) and a bit redder than the generic spiral galaxy we have implemented in PCC (0.71). This means that, if we correct for galactic dust reddening, then the overall color of the average globular cluster should be close to white if we calibrate with a G2V star, or slightly bluish if we calibrate with a spiral galaxy.
On the other hand, you can see that there are a lot of globular clusters with very blue colors. Some of them even bluer than Vega!
By the way, in PhotometricColorCalibration you'll be able to correc the dust reddening imposed by the Milky Way for extragalactic objects. This means that we'll be able to look at those object as if we were shooting them outside the Milky Way. :-)
Best regards,
Vicent.