Unfortunately there have been a lot of wild assumptions made in this thread resulting in a lot of naive statements about the legitimacy of this morph. Its amazing how people are so fast to reject something they have no knowledge of.
I have not seen this morph in person but I have met and spoken to the breeder working with it. The vendor at the show who had them is not the breeder. He is a supplier who does shows all around the country and mostly does resale. As a result, he would not be of much use as far as getting information about the morph is concerned and he would also be reliant on whatever photos the actual breeder provided for him.
From what I can tell, the animals at the show were likely hets for the trait and as such, would look completely normal. Theoretically, provided this is a simple recessive trait, hets bred back to each other would result in approximately 25% of the offspring exhibiting the trait you were breeding for. Most morphs are typically sold first as hets when they are released to the public as it is easier to produce hets and when you release hets, you still have time to produce and sell enough of the trait to recover the money you put into developing the trait (and more hopefully) before everyone has them.
As far as quality photos of the morph is concerned, when I spoke to the breeder, he showed me a couple photos on his cell phone (may have even been the same pics, I can't remember). When I inquired about whether or not he had better photos, he said he didn't have any because he sucked at taking pics and didn't have a good camera to do it with. I offered to take photos for him and at the time he wanted to wait because he was still working on breeding out the morph and didn't want to create a stir until he had enough to start selling off. He has been working with this morph for years trying to selectively breed the line and have more breeding stock. Whether the single pair of hets is indicative of him starting to release the morph or simply of him needing a little fast cash, I don't know. If it was the latter, he may not have gotten pics because he didn't care to hype it up yet and if it was the former, all it means is he has not yet gotten good pics. As for the photo hue being shifted, since the branch the cham is on and the leaves in the background are still green, that may not be the case but rather just a bad pic.
Time will tell with this morph. It may prove to be very impressive or it may prove to be a let down. I'm not ready to run with the crowd of naive assumptions, however, and bash the breeder or the line. To be honest, with how many veileds are bred every year, I'm surprised we don't see more genetic mutations like it.
Chris