What Gives Eyes Their Colour?

The amount of the pigment melanin in your iris—the pigmented region of your eyes—determines the colour of your eyes. The darker your eyes are, the more pigment you have. Because blue, grey, and green eyes contain less melanin in the iris, they are lighter. The majority of people on the planet will develop brown eyes. Blue and grey are the next most prevalent colours, with green being the most uncommon. Melanin not only gives our eyes colour, but it also protects them from the sun. Because light eyes have less pigment, they are significantly more vulnerable to the sun’s damaging rays than darker eyes.

Whether you require prescription glasses or not, it’s crucial to constantly protect your eyes when you’re outside, regardless of your eye colour. Make sure you have a good pair of sunglasses to protect yourself from the sun’s damaging rays. VSP’s online eyewear store, Eyeconic, has a large range of designer frames that may be customised to fit your prescription.

Colors that Change Constantly

Because newborn newborns’ eyes lack melanin, they are born with blue or nearly colourless eyes. Melanin levels rise over time, and by the age of three, their eyes will have darkened to their real hue. Changes in eye colour can be caused by disease, trauma, or ageing. In fact, our eyes begin to change as soon as we are born.

Superstitions about the colour of one’s eyes

On a related note, it’s interesting to notice that eye colour has long been a source of superstition. The mystical believe that the eyes are the windows to the soul, and that eye colour reveals a person’s abilities. The following are some personality traits linked to eye colour:

People with blue eyes have vivid imaginations.
Green-eyed people have bright minds.
Passionate souls have hazel eyes.
Brown-eyed people have a calm demeanour with underlying fire.

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