Color blind brothers fall into each other’s arms and cry after seeing color for the first time

0
1286

He then collapses into his brother’s arms.

The glasses he is wearing is from a company called EnChroma.

EnChroma describes its product as a tool that will help give the sight of colour to those who cannot see.

This is done because the lens separates “the overlapping red and green cones, helping improve vision for people who have difficulty seeing reds and greens.”

The two brothers are even seen examining a piece of paper on the floor that the are told is lime green.

Colour blindness affects one in every 12 men and one in every 200 women in the world and is usually genetic.