Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
1-3 will take me some time to figure out, but my approximate guess for 4 is Palestinian
Edit: to the person who downvoted, I apologize. Didn't mean to offend anyone with my guess
5. is Italian
Besides, her blue eyes probably are not natural because of the darker outer ridge (its more likely contact lenses)
https://adorelenses.com/de/content/11-natural-bitone-color-contact-lenses-blue-eyes
Dark limbal rings are quite natural, and, in fact, they're more common in light eyes.
"
- They tend to be more prominent in lighter-coloured eyes than very dark eyes, although even dark brown eyes may have limbal rings that, while not so noticeable, still subtly enhance attractiveness. In rare cases, some darker-eyed people may have blue limbal rings."
I'm one of those brown eyed people who does have a limbal ring, or whose limbal ring is obvious, and it's dark blue. I'm weird: my skin color (Celtic rim fair) doesn't go with my hair and eyes (dark brown) either. Recombination can produce odd results.
A famous person with that odd coloring and the blue limbal ring, although hers aren't as prominent:
They tend to disappear by the time you get to that woman's age, but not always. Genetically, some people retain them into middle age. Mine haven't disappeared, for example.
They're considered very attractive in both sexes, partly, they think, because it makes the white of the eye look whiter. Women try to get the same effect by putting eye liner on the inner rim of the bottom lid, although it washes out very quickly.
The perceived attractiveness is why colored iris lenses almost always have them. A friend of mine got them (They look fake as hell, like almost all of them, but, of course, I said they looked great.) and she said you have to specifically ask to have them rimless, but that might not be completely accurate.
I see what you mean, but still eye colour in No 5 does not look very natural to me... If hair is dark, eyes would be typically green, not blue:
It doesn't work that way, Dagne. In certain areas dark-haired, blue-eyed people are common, as in Ireland, for example. They're not uncommon among us, too. Of course, there's not only one shade of blue eyes. They can be blue-grey, blue-green, etc.
Even African Americans can wind up with blue eyes. That's a "mug shot", from a criminal arrest, so they're not contacts.
After all, blue eyes were first paired with dark hair in Europe. Only later did the blonde-blue eyed combination appear.
I'm going to wait just a little bit, but then I'll reveal.
The thread is getting repeatedly buried, so I'll reveal.
They're all 100% Italian, and not at all outliers.
Sorry if you feel tricked, but I thought it would be fun and informative.
Number 1 is Aurora Cortopassi, an occasional chef on Giallo Zafferano youtube videos. Surname is northwest Tuscan, and she definitely looks like a certain type of Tuscan. She's the same type, I think, as the "Lady with an Ermine". There are, of course, much darker Tuscans, like Andrea Bocelli, as just one example.
[/IMG]
Number 2 is, believe it or not, an actress of Calabrian ancestry. Hair color makes a tremendous difference in terms of people's perceptions. Her name is Gianna Maria Canale. She's obviously prettier, but I think the bone structure has similarities to Lady Gaga, Stephanie Germanotta.
The third picture is of Costanza Calabrese, an Italian news person.
The fourth picture is of Alicia Vitarelli, and Italian-American newscaster. The surname looks like Bari in Apulia. The nose may very well have been altered as it looks too small for her face. Unfortunately, that's an American thing.
The fifth, sixth and seventh pictures are all of women in my birth area: eastern Liguria, Lunigiana, i.e. La Spezia. So, Dagne, you were right: she's Italian. She's a local food personality, and so far as I know, the hair is dyed, but the eyes are real. That's what happens when you try to get rid of the grey in dark brown hair: it can turn out black.
Some more girls in our area with what foreigners consider unusual phenotypes for Italians, but which, while not the most common, are a very significant part of variation in certain areas.
[/IMG]
[/IMG]
[/IMG]
You can also find it in my father's area:
[/IMG]
This thread has been viewed 25569 times.