Would it be opaque, like a gaseous soup, or would it be something like Bespin from Star Wars?
I'm asking out of personal curiosity.
This is how Bespin's "life zone" in the upper atmosphere is usually depicted:

Spaceman Spiff wrote:...
I've seen many astronomically aware space artists paint gas giant skies like Earth's. I was hoping to point to the scientifically considered space art of William K. Hartmann in which he invariably paints gas giant skies as blue, just like Earth, but there's nothing on the internet. After much searching, I did find a small version of Adolf Schaller's stunning "Hunters, Sinkers and Floaters" showing hypothetical life on Jupiter: http://worldsofpossibility.blogspot.com/2007/07/lifes-gas-for-floater.html (third painting down). Some may recognise it from Carl Sagan's book "Cosmos".
Spiff.
I guess this is the point to ask whether anyone's read Wheelers by Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen... has some rather odd aliens in the atmosphere of Jupiter, but you'd expect that from the authors of Evolving the Alien.
bdm wrote:The sky colour would depend to some extent on the spectral class of the local sun. A red dwarf star wouldn't create the same vivid blue skies that a sunlike star would.