![]() ![]() The content on this blog is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Image cropped and modified from original. Top image used under CC0 Public Domain license. We love seeing our patients’ beautiful eyes! If you’re interested in changing your eye color with contacts, we can help! Just keep in mind that a colored layer curving over the round surface of your eye won’t look quite the same as natural eye color in a flat layer beneath the surface of the eye. Interested in Artificially Changing Your Eye Color With Contacts?įor the last few decades, anyone who has wanted a change in their eye color could turn to color contacts. David Bowie was a famous example of this. Aging can cause a very gradual change in eye color with more melanin production, and an eye injury can also cause permanent eye color change. Eye color can also appear different with changes in pupil size or the type of light the person is in. More likely it was a trick of the light based on how their eyes reflected the different outfits they wore. You probably had a friend in school who claimed their eyes would change colors every day. Exposure to light can trigger melanin production, and that can’t happen until they’ve been exposed to light for a while. ![]() Just like the way some kids have platinum blonde hair that darkens nearly to brown in adulthood, it can take time for the cells in their eyes to produce melanin. Sometimes babies (most commonly caucasian babies) are born with blue or gray eyes that change to a different color over time. Why Do Babies Often Start With Blue Eyes? Blue-eyed parents won’t necessarily produce blue-eyed children every single time. This means that you can’t always predict a child’s eye color based on how their parents’ eyes look. Tiny changes to any of those genes can lead to a different color. In recent years, scientists have found that eye color isn’t only controlled by a single gene but by as many as 16 genes working in tandem. Very rare red and “violet” eyes (typical in albinism, as pictured above) come from a total lack of melanin in all layers of the iris, so the color is a combination of Tyndall scattering and the blood vessels being more visible. ![]() Eyes are hazel when they have just enough melanin to obscure any Tyndall scattering. There isn’t any actual blue pigment present, but like the sky and the ocean, blue irises get their color from the way the light scatters around the iris, called Tyndall scattering.Įyes can be green if there is some melanin present but not enough to completely obscure all of the Tyndall scattering, so there’s a bit of blue appearance mixing with yellowish pigment. But what about blue eyes? Blue eyes are basically the absence of melanin. Melanin in the iris comes in two different types: eumelanin (which produces a deep chocolate brown color) and pheomelanin (which produces colors ranging between amber, green, and hazel). Heterochromia (partly or completely different-colored eyes): 1%.These are the percentages of different eye colors in the population: Brown eyes in varying shades are by far the most common, while blue eyes likely all trace back to a single common ancestor with a specific mutation. How Rare Are Different Eye Colors?Īnyone living in an English-speaking country might have the impression that eye colors like blue, hazel, and brown are about equally distributed across the population, but if you look at the whole planet, the ratios are very different. Melanin helps to protect the eye by absorbing light (including some UV light) that hits the iris, which is the part of the eye that controls the amount of light that reaches the retina. Melanin, the same compound that determines skin and hair color, is also responsible for different eye colors. ![]()
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