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I Heart Guts Brown Eyeball Pin - Grab Life by the Eyeballs, Eye Surgery, Health, Disease Awareness, Optometry School Funny Gift Eye Doctor Lapel Pin Educational Anatomical Eye

KWD 4

Brand
I Heart Guts
Category
Charts & Posters
Weight
46 g
1 +

Special Features

  • LOOKIN GOOD! This is the eyeball pin you've been looking for, now with a brown iris! Cute eye-catching pin perfect for your favorite glasses-wearing geek, laser eye surgery patient or optometry school grad!
  • PARTY PUPIL: Things are looking up in your quest for eyeball gifts! This fab little printed aluminum brown eyeball pin is easy on the eyes and looks cute on your jacket or backpack.
  • EYE FOR AN EYE: Cute eyeball gift brings eyeballs to eyeball health awareness, eyeball surgery, eye doctor gifts and any other reason you see fit. Funny gift for opticians, eye doctors, eye surgeons, optometrists or ophthalmology students.
  • FEEL SEEN: Whatever eyeball probs you have, we have cute eyeball pins and gifts to see you through! Shines light on eyeball diseases like astigmatism, strabismus, conjunctivitis, near-sighted and far-sightedness.
  • KEEP AN EYE ON IT: Adorable eyeball lapel pin will brighten your badge reel, lanyard, scrubs or hospital ID. Eyeball pin measures 1.25" was designed in the USA by I Heart Guts, makers of cure organ plushies and gifts, and made in China.

Description

Feast your eyes on our eyeball pins! Wonderful eyeball pin makes a perfect post-op recovery gift after eyeball surgery. Things are looking up in your quest for eyeball gifts! Our cute eyeball lapel pin makes a great gift for your eye doctor, optometrist, eye surgeon, ophthalmology residents, medical school professors, eye health advocates and all kinds of eyeball nerds! See your eye doc smile with our cute optometry gifts! Whatever eyeball probs you have, we have cute eyeball pins and gifts to see you through! Eyeballs are the second most complex structure in the human body (second only to the brain), so these tissues often have issues. Common eye disorders and diseases include macular degeneration, cataracts, amblyopia, strabismus (cross-eye), refractive errors and diabetic retinopathy. And of course sometimes near-sighted and far-sighted eyeballs need help in the form of glasses, contacts or eyeball surgery. Vision loss increases with age. Other vision issues include conjunctivitis, amblyopia ('lazy" eye -- hey, who are you calling lazy?), astigmatism, color blindness, cataracts, dry eyes and detached retina.

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