Heterochromatic eyes are typically when each eye is a different color. She has central heterochromia, two or more colors in both eyes. It's more pronounced than the orange/light brown shade of hazel eyes.
The picture I posted has bad tint but Clarke has an orange color around her iris and a deeper blue near the rim of the pupil.
This pic might show it better
That's wild but the filters are probably making it more intense.
|
-
02-22-2021, 11:25 AM #31
- Join Date: Apr 2012
- Location: Sacramento, California, United States
- Posts: 34,910
- Rep Power: 222413
ωσяℓ∂ тяανєℓєя ȼяєω
Pre-Med crew
₪ DEFQON.1 AUSTRALIA 2016 ₪
177 lbs | O: 165 /// B: 260 /// S: 335 /// D: 390
I WANT TO BRING BIG DRAMA SHOH WITH THE MAYXICAN STYLE, MAX
-
02-22-2021, 11:29 AM #32
-
02-22-2021, 11:34 AM #33
-
02-22-2021, 11:36 AM #34
-
02-22-2021, 04:39 PM #35
-
02-22-2021, 04:49 PM #36
-
02-22-2021, 04:56 PM #37
-
02-22-2021, 06:04 PM #38
-
02-22-2021, 06:14 PM #39
yea, i didn't realize black hair was my phenotype till i met this lil bish from spain. hnnnggeeddd so hard
then this bish had the blue eyes and i think that would be ideal. but there are so few with everything that it's almost fuken moot, unless you just HAPPEN to come across it
she's fallen off hard too. sad.. no idea how a girl so beautiful could think she needs more. her natty tits were nice too
-
02-22-2021, 06:23 PM #40
-
02-22-2021, 06:25 PM #41
-
02-22-2021, 06:28 PM #42
-
02-22-2021, 09:07 PM #43"The flowers bloom, then wither... The stars shine and one day become extinct. This earth, the sun, the galaxies and even the big universe, someday will be destroyed. Compared with that, the human life is only a blink, just a little time. In that short time - people are born, laugh, cry, fight, are injured, feel joy, sadness, hate someone, love someone. All in just a moment. And then, are embraced by the eternal sleep called death."
-
02-22-2021, 10:43 PM #44
-
02-23-2021, 12:08 AM #45
-
02-23-2021, 12:25 AM #46
-
02-23-2021, 01:27 AM #47
-
02-23-2021, 01:36 AM #48
-
02-23-2021, 01:41 AM #49
-
02-23-2021, 01:43 AM #50
-
02-23-2021, 04:11 AM #51
Wrong. Skin color to a degree has a sexual dimorphic component.
Women, on average, do have lighter skin than men. This is measurable, and, evidently, universal—it appears among people in all geographic regions. There’s a nice anthropological study that covers this in detail here. I quote a relevant excerpt, below:
Comparison of skin reflectances between the sexes confirmed previous observations that human females are consistently lighter than males (Byard, 1981; Robins, 1991). Although female skin coloration darkens through adolescence and adulthood...females are still significantly lighter (that is, show a higher value for skin reflectance) than males for populations in which males and females are represented from the same location.
Light skin is more efficient than dark skin at photosynthesizing vitamin D. Vitamin D, in turn, is necessary for calcium absorption in the human body. Women have elevated need for calcium absorption during pregnancy and breastfeeding stages of child-bearing, since they’re supporting the fetal and neonatal skeletal systems. And so women’s skin is slightly demelanized, as compared with men’s skin, for improved efficiency at vitamin D synthesis.
-
02-23-2021, 04:27 AM #52
Bookmarks