strawberry blonde
(inbetween blonde,red,orange, and maybe even sometimes pinkish)
If her hair is dark now it won't turn red, if she had to have blonde hair then it might have turned blonde.
Dark Blonde hair with hazel eyes
Not necessarily. The baby's hair color is determined by a combination of genetic factors from both parents, so it is possible for the baby to have a different hair color than their parents.
Ginger or red hair is a recessive gene, the most rare hair color in fact - meaning if its combined with any other gene brunette/black (even blonde) it won't show up (phenotype) Unless the father has a recessive (hidden) ginger gene as well, then the chances would be 50%.
grey
The baby could inherit a combination of the parents' traits, resulting in a hair color that could be a mix of brown and blonde, or either one of those colors. It is also possible for the baby to inherit a different hair color altogether due to genetic variation.
Yes, it is possible for a baby to be born with blonde hair even if both parents have brunette hair. Hair color is determined by a combination of genes from both parents, so there can be variations in hair color among offspring.
Gimger hair is becoming more of an unlikely hair colour, and it has been said that in around 50 years, it will be'extinct'. Hair colour is decided by your genes, but rather than looking at just the colour of the hair, you would need to look at the genes that each parent has. As the father is blonde, he will have two blonde hair genes, which are recessive. The mother has ginger hair, and therefore has one ginger hair gene, which is also recessive, along with another gene which could either be blonde, black, or brown. If you think about it as a chart like this, it becomes much more simplistic. . . . The b stands for blonde, the g for ginger, and the O for other. .other is used as we are not aware of the other gene that the mother has. The O, or other, is shown as a dominant gene. b b g bg bg O bO bO From this chart, it shows there is a 25% chance of being ginger, and a 25% chance of being blonde. Then a 50% chance of being other, which could also turn out to be blonde. The child is therefore more likely to have blonde hair. . .
You aren't serious are you, the hair grows back out their natural color, and the babies hair color is determined by the persons genes not their hair dye. So, in conclusion, if you said that the baby's parents originally had blonde hair, it means that the baby will more than likely be blonde.
Not necessarily. I once saw a baby rabbit with the fur color of brown but its mother was ginger and the father was brown with ginger spots. The genetics of a rabbit are complex, there are dominant and recessive genes and many variations. Wild rabbit Agouti Brown is the most dominant color gene.
It depends on what genes that the parents have, it needs more information. But, it would most likely have brown eyes and brown hair because I think brown is the dominant gene for hair and eyes.
It depends on your family background. The eyes could be any color. It just has to do with heritage.