Imagine your hair is like a rainbow made out of crayons, each color comes from different kinds of crayons inside your body.
Your hair gets its color from something called melanin, which acts like those crayons. There are two main types: eumelanin, which makes black and brown colors, and pheomelanin, which makes red and yellow tones. The more melanin you have, the darker your hair is, it's like using a lot of crayon to color in.
How It Works
- If you have a lot of eumelanin, your hair looks black or brown, like a big, dark drawing.
- If you have more pheomelanin, your hair might look blonde or red, like using lots of yellow and pink crayons.
When you’re born, your body decides how many crayons it wants to use, and sometimes it makes mistakes! That’s why some people have gray hair, their body runs out of crayon, and the paper shows through.
As you grow up, your crayon supply can change too. Some people lose color as they get older, that’s when white hair starts appearing, like when all the crayons fade away and only the white paper is left. Imagine your hair is like a rainbow made out of crayons, each color comes from different kinds of crayons inside your body.
Your hair gets its color from something called melanin, which acts like those crayons. There are two main types: eumelanin, which makes black and brown colors, and pheomelanin, which makes red and yellow tones. The more melanin you have, the darker your hair is, it's like using a lot of crayon to color in.
Examples
- A child has brown hair like their mom but blue eyes like their dad.
- Someone’s hair turns gray as they age.
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See also
- How Does The Secret behind Blue Eye Color! Work?
- How Does Human Skin-Colors Explained ( Not What you Think ). Work?
- How to make a cat?
- What are expanded genomes?
- What are biological traits?