As you get older, your risk of developing floaters increases. Floaters tend to occur in people who are over 40 years of age and are most common in those who are in their 60s and 70s. However, some younger people may also develop floaters.
As you get older, the vitreous humour in the middle of your eyeball can become less firm and strands of a protein called collagen may become visible within it. The collagen strands may appear to swirl as your eyes move.
Normally, light travels through the clear layer of vitreous humour to reach the retina. The retina is the light-sensitive layer of cells at the back of your eye that turns what you are looking at into an image, and transmits this to your brain. Floaters can cause shadows as they float through the fluid in your eye.