login
The Eyes Group

About

Description
AnYth!nG AboUT thE :-
eye , Auge , 目, oog , oeil , μάτι , occhio , 눈 , olho , العين , глаз , ojo , 眼睛 , ... .
Basic
date created
May 29th, 12:57pm
creator
group privacy
public

Featured Song

To listen to music and watch video on imeem, you'll need at least Macromedia Flash Player 9 and JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Latest Blog Posts

Post
 
Date
 
Sep 20th, 9:13pm
 
Sep 20th, 9:01pm
 
Sep 20th, 8:59pm
 
Sep 20th, 8:56pm
 
Sep 20th, 8:55pm
RssFeed

Recent Forum Activity

Title
 
Replies
 
Last Updated
 
11
 
Jun 7th, 1:34am
 
12
 
May 31st, 12:18pm
 
1
 
May 30th, 6:29am

Blog Posts

blog post In Your Eyes
Category: songs
Posted: Sep 20, 2008 at 9:13 PM
By Misa Hatake
In Your Eyes
(Kylie Minoque)

What on earth am I meant to do
In this crowded place there is only you
Was gonna to leave now I have to stay
You have taken my breath away

Uuuu-uh, Is the world still spinning around
(spinning around)
Uuuu-uh, I don't feel like coming down

It's in your eyes
I can tell what your thinking
My heart is sinking too
It's no surprise
I've been watching you lately
I want to make it with you

Destiny has a funny way
When it comes and takes all your cares away
I can't think of a single thing
Other than what a beautiful state I'm in

Uuuu-uh, Is the world still spinning around
(spinning around)
Uuuu-uh, I don't feel like coming down

It's in your eyes
I can tell what your thinking
My heart is sinking too
It's no surprise
I've been watching you lately
I want to make it with you
(with you, with you…)

Uuuu-uh, Is the world still spinning around
(spinning around)
Uuuu-uh, I don't feel like coming down

It's in your eyes
I can tell what your thinking
My heart is sinking too
It's no surprise
I've been watching you lately
I want to make it with you
[x3]

It's in your eyes

In Your Eyes - Kylie Minogue

blog post Heterochromia
Category: eye color
Posted: Sep 20, 2008 at 9:01 PM
By Misa Hatake
Heterochromia (also known as a heterochromia iridis or heterochromia iridium) is an ocular condition in which one iris is a different color from the other iris (complete heterochromia), or where the part of one iris is a different color from the remainder (partial heterochromia or sectoral heterochromia). It is a result of the relative excess or lack of pigment within an iris or part of an iris, which may be inherited or acquired by disease or injury.This uncommon condition usually results due to uneven melanin content. A number of causes are responsible, including genetics such as chimerism and Waardenburg syndrome. Trauma and certain medications, such as some prostaglandin analogues can also cause increased or decreased pigmentation in one eye. On occasion, the condition of having two different colored eyes is caused by blood staining the iris after sustaining injury.

British singer David Bowie is a famous person often wrongly attributed with heterochromia. His apparent condition is due to a teenage injury. (One eye appears darker because the pupil is permanently dilated.) American actress Kate Bosworth has sectoral heterochromia, resulting in a hazel section at the bottom of her right blue eye, while the left is completely blue. American Actress Elizabeth Berkley has sectoral heterochromia; her right eye is half green and half brown, and her entire left eye is green. So does actor Anthony Head - he has a patch of hazel in his left eye where both eyes are blue-green overall. The lead vocalist of American band Rise Against, Tim McIlrath, has heterochromia; his left eye is blue while his right is brown. American actress Mila Kunis also has heterochromia, resulting in one blue eye and one brown-green eye. American Actress Demi Moore also has heterochromia, by having one green eye, and the other hazel. The English Actress Jane Seymour also has heterochromia; her left eye is green whereas her right eye is brown.
click to commentclick to comment
blog post Hazel
Category: eye color
Posted: Sep 20, 2008 at 8:59 PM
By Misa Hatake
Hazel eyes are due to a combination of a Rayleigh scattering and a moderate amount of melanin in the iris' anterior border layer. Hazel eyes often appear to shift in color from a light brown to a medium golden-green. A number of studies using three-point scales have assigned "hazel" to be the medium-color between the lightest shade of blue and darkest shade of brown.This can sometimes produce a multicolored iris, i.e., an eye that is light brown near the pupil and charcoal or amber/dark green on the outer part of the iris (and vice versa) when observed in sunlight. Hazel is commonly found in some regions of the Middle East, Europe, North America, parts of Central Asia, parts of North India, Northern Pakistan and in Afghanistan. Rarely, hazel eyes can be found in people of sub-saharan African, Native American and East Asian descent.

Definitions of the eye color "hazel" vary: it is sometimes considered to be synonymous with light-brown and gold.In North America, "hazel" is often used to describe eyes that appear to change color, ranging from light brown to green and even gray, depending on current lighting in the environment.

click to comment
blog post Green
Category: eye color
Posted: Sep 20, 2008 at 8:56 PM
By Misa Hatake
Green eyes are the product of light to moderate amounts of melanin. According to some researchers, green eyes are the result of mutations that change the melanin structure. Green eyes are the rarest natural eye color found in humans. Only 1-2% of the world population has green eyes. Green eyes are most common in northern Europe, Scandinavia, Germany, Ireland and sometimes can be found in France, Spain, Italy, to a lesser extent in the Middle East, as well as Northern parts of India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Much of the Icelandic population has either green or blue eye color.
click to comment
blog post Gray
Category: eye color
Posted: Sep 20, 2008 at 8:55 PM
By Misa Hatake
Gray eyes have less melanin than blue eyes, even though they are considered a darker shade of blue (like blue-green). They are most common in European Russia, Finland and the Baltic States. Under magnification, gray eyes exhibit small amounts of yellow and brown color in the iris.

A gray iris may indicate the presence of a uveitis. However, other visual signs make a uveitis obvious.

Visually, gray eyes often tend to appear to change between the shades of blue, green and gray. This is said to be influenced by the lighting and the surroundings (such as clothes, makeup, etc.).

The Greek goddess Athena was renowned for having "owl-gray" (in Greek, γλαυκῶπις – glaukōpis) or "sea-gray" eyes.
click to comment