minuteblue is wrong. One of my best friends had purple eyes when she was little, but they turned blue when she got to about 8.
Eyes do sometimes change color as a person gets older, so I would guess that it is possible, but unlikely.
No, her eyes were purple. They were a lilac-y kind of purple, which could have been a shade of blue, but the color they looked, at all times (not just when the light hit them in a certain way), was purple. Whether it is classed as a shade of blue or not is not the point -- her eyes were purple.
No. Purple is not a color the pigment in the human eye will produce.
A human eye can be varying shades of blue, blue/grey, green, brown, and any combination there of. In rare instances, people with certain types of albinism can have red/pink eyes. http://www.womenfitness.net/r_img2/oalbinism.jpg
These people are usually visually impaired though.
No, I'm not wrong. What you are calling purple would have mearly been a shade of blue or an optical illusion caused by Oculocutaneous albinism when the light strikes the eyes a particular way.
Ah yes, I'm old enough to remember this. It was from an old nonsense song, and the "one eyed, one horned, flying, purple" part describes the creature, and the "people eater" part tells you what it EATS! And, by the way, it can play a tune on the horn sticking out of it's head! Hope that helps!!!
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minuteblue is wrong. One of my best friends had purple eyes when she was little, but they turned blue when she got to about 8.
Eyes do sometimes change color as a person gets older, so I would guess that it is possible, but unlikely.
No, her eyes were purple. They were a lilac-y kind of purple, which could have been a shade of blue, but the color they looked, at all times (not just when the light hit them in a certain way), was purple. Whether it is classed as a shade of blue or not is not the point -- her eyes were purple.
Please answer my q, if you can:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Akjsr...
No. Purple is not a color the pigment in the human eye will produce.
A human eye can be varying shades of blue, blue/grey, green, brown, and any combination there of. In rare instances, people with certain types of albinism can have red/pink eyes. http://www.womenfitness.net/r_img2/oalbinism.jpg
These people are usually visually impaired though.
No, I'm not wrong. What you are calling purple would have mearly been a shade of blue or an optical illusion caused by Oculocutaneous albinism when the light strikes the eyes a particular way.
I dont know about eyes turning purple - but I was born with bright blue eyes that turned into a pretty green color sometime in elementary school...
Ah yes, I'm old enough to remember this. It was from an old nonsense song, and the "one eyed, one horned, flying, purple" part describes the creature, and the "people eater" part tells you what it EATS! And, by the way, it can play a tune on the horn sticking out of it's head! Hope that helps!!!
Yup
it might be posible. maby a dark blue that looks like violet