Of course not
contacts of course !
well the baby could have brown hair or black hair, and it could get blue eyes or brown eyes....my 1 year old has my brown hair, and blue eyes, her father has brown eyes, his moms eyes are hazel/blue, and most of my family besides a cousin has blue eyes, this time blue eyes were domanite or w/e. so it could really go either way.
No, is my answer. I have never heard of blue eyes turning brown. That is why eye color is a common means of identification. Of course, there are tinted contact lenses nowadays.
it may be glaucoma
Natural body oils make Bichon's hair turn brown in those spots sometimes.
Not necessarily. I have red hair. My Mother was a blonde and my father had dark brown hair though had blondish touches when in his teens. I also have blue eyes as did both my parents. it is genetic, not anything one can turn on or off.
green but they change to grey or blue also :)
When Her Eyes Turn Blue EP was created in 2009.
Usually, when children are born, their eyes aren't the natural color. Then when babies get 4 or 5 their eyes turn to the natural color.Examples:* When I was born, I had blue eyes, and I am a white american. But when I grew up, I ended up with brown eyes. * When my mom was born, she had brown eyes, and she is a white american. But when she grew up, she ended up with green eyes.
I'm making a book where a select group of teenage birds can turn into humans with wings and the bluejay is one of them, he is going to be a petty thief, he antagonizes the eagle (Andor), he has spiky blue hair, dark brown eyes, a white shirt and blue jeans.
blue eyes very likely, blond hair, not lucky- will turn out brown as brown hair is the dominant allele in a brown-blond pair of alleles (see genetics, hair color, wikipedia). Hi, no I don't agree because I have brown hair now but I was properly blond til I was 6 years old. Both my parents had brown hair. I am English (and by that I mean properly English - not muslim) and like 90% of ethnically English people, have blond hair when young that darkens with age. This is due to the English race being Germanic and related to the Germans, Danes, Norwegians etc. In the US, there are lots of people with either English or German ancestry - so much the same story there too. I do not know about English race, ancestors and genetic traits, nor the genetic background of the darkening blond hair, however if both parents have brown hair, it means that they carry at least one dominant gene that expresses brown hair. Still, if both parent have also one recessive allele for blond hair, theoretically there is a 25% chance that their children could be blond haired, and of course with blue eyes.
Most likely, it may also turn a green blue.