Paige Spiranac Reveals Dominant Eye Color Using Trending TikTok Filter

The golf instructor loves participating in a fun video trend.
Paige Spiranac

Paige Spiranac.


Much like the rest of us, Paige Spiranac clearly loves a good TikTok trend. The golf instructor and media personality took to the video-based platform on Wednesday to share her take on a popular filter.

The platform’s dominant eye color filter is supposed to eliminate insignificant colors in the user’s eyes, while enhancing their dominant color.

Spiranac sat perched in front of the camera with her eyes closed. She wore a plunging, tan halter top and sported full glam, while her blonde locks were styled in waves, cascading over her shoulders. The 30-year-old opened her eyes toward the end of the 15 second clip to reveal striking ice blue eyes.

“I always thought my eyes were more green than blue,” the one-time SI Swimsuit model wrote in her caption.

“Paige you’re a beautiful woman and you have beautiful eyes!😘,” one of Spiranac’s 1.5 million followers on the platform wrote in the comments section.

“blue or green ur beautiful ❤️,” someone else added.

“gorgeous eyes, no matter the color,” another fan noted.

When she posed for the 2018 SI Swimsuit Issue, Spiranac traveled to Aruba, where she posed for photographer James Macari on the beach in a series of strappy black swimsuits. She was also captured in a few iconic photos on the back of a motorbike. 

“That moment meant so much to me because I just felt so strong and confident and sexy,” she said at the time. Check out her full gallery here.

Make sure to follow SI Swimsuit on YouTube!


Published
Cara O’Bleness
CARA O’BLENESS

Cara O’Bleness is a writer and editor on the Lifestyle and Trending News team for SI Swimsuit. Prior to joining SI Swimsuit in 2022, she worked as a writer and editor across a number of content verticals, including food, lifestyle, health and wellness, and small business and entrepreneurship. In her free time, O’Bleness loves reading, spending time with her family and making her way through Michigan’s many microbreweries. She is a graduate of Michigan State University’s School of Journalism.