lucifer-is-a-bag-of-dicks:

kintatsujo:

mon-degreen:

So a lot of the time, when people think of heterochromia, they think of a person (or a non-human animal, etc.) with one blue eye and one brown eye, or maybe with fantasy eye colors like bright yellow and lime green.

While having a blue eye and a brown eye certainly does happen, it’s not the only type of heterochromia there is. As someone with heterochromia, I thought I’d explain how it works in real people. Of course, real irises aren’t flat colors, but this makes it easier to see the difference, and I don’t want to use real people’s pictures without their permission.

(Note: the iris colors in the first image were chosen to be accessible to the color blind and are not representative of actual human iris colors. The light blue color is the base color of the iris and the dark red-purple color is the heterochromia.)

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Yuuuusss

I once knew a girl in primary school with three eye colours, she had one regular blue eye and a green eye with a freckly patch of brown taking up like a whole third of it (actually it might have been hazel?? I can’t remember)

I’d never noticed until we had to draw pictures of each other for class and it blew my mind

kitty-sylvie:

teawitch:

writing-prompt-s:

While putting your favorite condiment on a sandwich, you accidentally make a magical occult symbol and summon a demon.

You silently take two more slices of bread out of the package and make another sandwich. You put it on a plate with a handful of potato chips and hand it to the demon. He takes the sandwich, smiles and vanishes in a puff of demonic smoke. The next day you get that job promotion you were after. There was no contract. No words spoken. You owe nothing. But every now and then, another demon pops in for lunch. Demons don’t often get homemade sandwiches. 

Adorable?