Question:

Will my daughters skin change too?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

My son and daughter are mixed hispanic and white.My son had light skin when he was born and then his skin became darker and stayed darker the more he was exposed to he sun.

My daughter is very light but she is still a baby and my son is 2.

 Tags:

   Report

7 ANSWERS


  1. It probably won't change unless she is exposed to a lot of sunlight.  


  2. Well, probobly. Thats the melinone [that might be misspelled >.>] in his skin.

  3. yes her skin will most likely change to.  my son is black and white mixed and my bf other kids(different mothers, all white though like me) are all light skinned, my son is the darkess of them all and he is the youngest.  he is like one shade lighter than his dad.  it really all depends.  you will just have to wait and see... congrads!!!

  4. my daughter is mixed race, Indian (from india) (DAD) and white (me). She was born very white, she now is a deep olive tone and she is 1 and 1/2 some of its cause she is outside so much, though her joints, and face are just naturally getting that Mediterranean look. Shes at least 4 times darker than me. My good friend is married to a Pakastani man and her son is very light 2 time lighter than my daughter. Though he is darker than her. SO I think your kids could have different tones but will tend to get a little browner than you. My sister has 2 african american mixed children and one is very dark, looks very typical black, her 2nd son is white, blonde, and blue eyed. He bleaches even white in the sun and doesnt hardly get tan. Its a very odd scene. Also the fact they are 10 years apart.  

  5. her skin will darken.  All babies, even white babies, have skin that gets darker over time. None of us are as pale as we were when first born. My husband is Indian, I'm white, and my baby has a tannish olive tone that is closer to my skin than my husbands, but still darker than me.  She was born fair. I suspect she'll continue to get darker as she gets older and is exposed more to the sun.   I've seen some hispanic children that are dark and some that are quite fair. Siblings often have similar skin tones, but not always. There are many families where one child has dark hair, dark eyes and another child has light hair, light eyes.


  6. protect your children from the sun...

    hats, sunglasses... protective clothing

    it only takes one day of over-exposure...

    check this out: http://www.cdc.gov/nasd/docs/d000701-d00...

    be happy that your children are healthy and don't worry about their skin color!

  7. yes it will change. they may not be the same exactly but there is a good chance of it.

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 7 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.