About My Lumineyes® and Dr. Mustafa Mete
My Lumineyes® is a medical project focused on one thing: changing eye color safely by working with the
natural iris, not against it. The goal is not to follow trends, but to offer a controlled, ophthalmologist-led
laser procedure for patients who want lighter, brighter eyes without artificial implants or tattooing.
My Lumineyes® focuses on safe, controlled laser eye color change under ophthalmic supervision.Who Is Behind My Lumineyes®?
My Lumineyes® was developed by Dr. Mustafa Mete, an ophthalmologist with years of experience in
anterior segment and laser-based eye procedures. Instead of following aggressive cosmetic trends, the project
grew out of a simple clinical question: “Can we safely reduce iris melanin in a controlled way, without cutting
the eye or placing foreign material inside it?”
Dr. Mete’s work on laser eye color change focuses on gradual melanin
reduction, patient selection, and long-term follow-up rather than quick, spectacular but unsafe results.
The philosophy is conservative: protect vision first, improve appearance only within medically acceptable limits.
What Makes Lumineyes® Different?
Many so-called “eye color change” methods are essentially cosmetic shortcuts: colored contact lenses, corneal
tattooing (keratopigmentation), or artificial iris implants. Some of these options can be useful in selected
medical cases, but in healthy eyes they may carry a high risk of chronic pain, inflammation, corneal damage or
even vision loss. My Lumineyes® does not use intraocular implants and does not tattoo the cornea.
Instead, the Lumineyes method works on the natural iris pigment. The procedure aims to reduce
melanin density in carefully planned steps, allowing the underlying iris stroma to reflect more light. This
approach preserves the patient’s own iris pattern. It is a slower path, but it respects anatomy and physiology.
For a detailed comparison of surgical alternatives, you can read our
eye color change surgery overview.
Our Medical Approach to Eye Color Change
Every case starts with an ophthalmic examination: iris grading, slit-lamp evaluation, intraocular pressure
measurements and a review of previous eye history. Not everyone is a candidate for laser eye color change
and not every melanin grade will respond in the same way. Very dark eyes require more sessions and more
conservative planning, while lighter eyes usually need fewer procedures.
On the website, you will find procedural information under
Laser Eye Color Change, long-term considerations under
Permanent Eye Color Change, alternative methods such as keratopigmentation
under Keratopigmentation Eye Color Change, and detailed warnings
about artificial iris implants at
Artificial Color Iris Implants. Each page has a specific role so that
information does not repeat or conflict.

Safety, Ethics and Patient Selection
My Lumineyes® does not promise a specific “celebrity eye color” or guarantee an exact shade. Final results depend
on the natural iris structure, melanin grade and individual healing. The priority is always ocular health. Cases
with unrealistic expectations, unstable eye conditions or high-risk anatomy are not accepted, even if they are
willing to pay more.
The project follows current principles from recognized ophthalmic bodies such as the
American Academy of Ophthalmology
, especially on avoiding unnecessary intraocular interventions in healthy eyes. This is why techniques like
cosmetic implants and aggressive corneal tattooing are not part of the Lumineyes protocol.
Where We Work and How to Reach Us
My Lumineyes® provides consultations and laser sessions only in clinical environments that meet the necessary
equipment and sterility standards. Patients often start by reviewing our
before–after photos, then exploring the
Eye Color Simulator to understand realistic expectations before booking a visit.
If you are considering laser eye color change and want to understand whether you are a reasonable candidate,
you can use the contact information and forms on our website to request more details. Please include your eye
history, current medications and any previous surgeries so that your case can be evaluated as safely as possible.






