There is no natural way to have green eyes if your iris' are already another colour. However, there is a way to temporarily change the colour with coloured contacts. As technology advances, there are better quality lenses as well as a more decent range to choose from.
If the color of one or both eyes changes suddenly and significantly, see an eye doctor as soon as possible. It is particularly dangerous for eyes to change from brown to green, or from blue to brown. Major changes in the iris' pigment can indicate illness, such as: Horner's syndrome.
If the brown-eyed mother carried the green allele (bG), she could pass the green allele on 50% of the time, so when married up with the father's blue allele, they could have a green-eyed child.
The short answer: no. The pigment melanin determines your eye color. Eyes with a lot of melanin will be naturally darker. The less melanin in your eyes, the lighter they'll be.
(Due to rounding, percentages don't always add up to 100%.) Both parents with brown eyes: 75% chance of baby with brown eyes, 18.8% chance of baby with green eyes, 6.3% chance of baby with blue eyes.
Two green-eyed parents are likely to have a green-eyed child, although there are exceptions. Two hazel-eyed parents are likely to have a hazel-eyed child, although a different eye color could emerge. If one of the grandparents has blue eyes, the odds of having a baby with blue eyes increases slightly.
A couple's children can have almost any eye color, even if it does not match those of either parent. Currently it is thought that eye color is determined by about six genes, so you can imagine how inheritance of eye color becomes very complicated.
Yorkshire-based iridologist John Andrews said: "Alas, it is a misconception that eyes change color with diet. It is a scientific impossibility." Yvonne Davis, an iridologist from London, was similarly skeptical but explained how the color change could potentially have happened.
Green Eyes
Green is considered by some to be the actual rarest eye color in the world, though others would say it's been dethroned by red, violet, and grey eyes.
In addition to colored contacts, eye color can be permanently changed using a laser that disrupts the top layer of your eye's melanin (pigment), the amount of which determines eye color/shade. With this, a brown eye will turn blue permanently.
If both parents have a blue allele, it is likely that the child will have blue eyes. However, if one parent has green eyes and the other blue, your child will most likely have green eyes, as green is dominant over blue.
"One of the best kept secrets by makeup artists is that smudging a warm brown eye shadow with coppery undertones onto the lash line will bring out green and gold flashes in brown eyes," Ungaro says.
A technique to change the eye color in a safe and effective way by applying laser to the iris, without surgery. The laser diminishes the density of the iris pigment, lightening the eye color. The procedure is done in several sessions: each session lasts around 10 minutes for both eyes.
We found that green is the most popular lens colour, with brown coming in a close second, despite it being one of the most common eye colours. Although blue and hazel are seen as the most attractive eye colours for men and women they are surprisingly the least popular.
There are plenty of blue-eyed Asians. This probably happens when the traditional blue-eyed allele comes into a family from a (possibly very distant) European ancestor. Blue eyes then resurface in a child generations later if they inherit the allele from both parents.
A blue and a green-eyed parent will have all hazel-eyed kids. This is one of the reasons I like the modifier gene explanation so much. It can help explain how green and blue-eyed parents might have hazel-eyed kids.
Yes, natural purple eyes are possible. There are many different shades of blues and greys out there and many in-between colors. Although very rare, some people's natural pigmentation can even be violet or purple in color.
Aside from being well-known figures to many people across the world, all three of them also have an eye condition known as Heterochromia, or two different colored eyes. Heterochromia is fairly uncommon, occurring in less than 1 percent of the population.
Some people believe that applying a mixture of honey and water can change your eye color over time. There's no evidence to suggest that this home remedy would work. It's unlikely that honey will penetrate deeper than the outer layers of your cornea, where there is no pigment.
In as much as 15 percent of the white population (or people who tend to have lighter eye colors), eye color changes with age. People who had deep brown eyes during their youth and adulthood may experience a lightening of their eye pigment as they enter middle age, giving them hazel eyes.
Each parent will pass one copy of their eye color gene to their child. In this case, the mom will always pass B and the dad will always pass b. This means all of their kids will be Bb and have brown eyes. Each child will show the mom's dominant trait.
Your baby's eye colour is determined largely by genetics . Nothing you do or eat in pregnancy, or indeed after your baby is born, can change it.
Yes. The short answer is that brown-eyed parents can have kids with brown, blue or virtually any other color eyes.