"Brown and blue" are the standard colors for the plate leads on an OPT. Just like Green is the standard color for the 6.3 volt winding & yellow is the standard for the 5v and black is the std for the 120 V winding.
Since these are AC, for the most part we simply do not care which way the primary or secondary wires are connected on a POWER tranny.
If I have an old Fender Super and fry the OT and replace it with a real Fender part it's overwhelmingly likely that if I connect the new blue to where the old blue went, I will be fine.
If I buy a kit, it's reasonably possible that the kit vendor one month got a good deal on brand "X" output trannies, sold them all, and 6 months later got a good deal on brand "Y" OT's. Their basing diagram (mounting holes) are the same, the impedances are the same, so they are interchangeable. But he still has the same kit wiring diagram & instructions. Similarly, if you find an old amp and decide to convert it to a guitar amp or salvage the output tranny, you will once again probably have a blue and brown wire which you now know for sure are the plate leads. One of them is called (and you don't need to know this) "start" and one is called "finish". The kit seller, maybe for brand X the blue is the start and the brown is the finish. It could be different on brand "Y". The salvage job, same story. You cannot know and if you DID know and it was wrong you would STILL have to flip them.
Point being, unless you are replacing a specific part with the same specific part, you really cannot predict which is the start and which is the finish. And/or, you may decide to hook up the negative feedback lead to the opposite phase of the phase inverter or phase splitter (assuming push-pull dual output tube config) And so, it (flipping the plate wires) is just one of those things you have to be prepared to do on a fresh build. You could search specs for hours, you could argue with color codes all you want, but you have to make it right and clumsy as it may be, you just have to try it one way and then the other. One way will be grossly obviously wrong. So we want to leave the leads long, not run them all neat and tidy, and fire up the amp to determine which way is right.
If I was Fender and getting my trannies from a known source and I could specify that "blue" was always the "start", then I could wire up 1000 of them and they would all work fine. If not, it's just a 50/50 chance and there's no point getting exercised about it. If it's wrong, flip 'em. End of story.
It's probably the case that there is an official EIA color code designating "blue" as the "start" and "brown" as the finish (or vice versa) but few seem to pay attention. And again, it it turned out wrong, you'd STILL have to flip them.