Blue, purple, green, no hair dye required.
There are plenty of ways to differentiate characters from each other, but one of normally limited utility is hair color. Human hair has a limited amount of variation, after all, not enough to make everyone on a half hour show once a week
easily distinguished. Thus, this
trope was born, so that artists could use the full spectrum of color. It's so common that it's mostly considered an
Acceptable Break from Reality now.
This is especially common in
anime, where characters often have impossible hair colors. This started with
manga series that used distinctive colors on the covers to make characters stand out, even though they all had either dark or light hair in the actual black-and-white pictures;
anime brought it to the screen and made it a standard part of character designs.
There are several reasons why artists do this. The first, noted above, is to help distinguish characters from each other, as with
Anime Hair. It may be done to indicate character personality, such as an
Emotionless Girl with blue or white hair. It may indicate that a character is unique, if they are the only one in the cast with their hair color. Or it may be done just to suit the artist's taste for variety.
Some specific colors have
subtropes which ascribe certain character traits to them:
a blue-haired girl may be shy; a
pink-haired girl may be cheerful or passionate or sweetnote any of the three; it's ambiguous;
a white-haired young man is often evil.
Subtrope of
Hair Colors. When hair is
depicted as an odd color, but is supposed to be a normal color (e.g., powder blue standing in for grey), that's
Hair Color Dissonance. When the hair color is realistic but is not justified by the setting, that's
Implausible Hair Color.
See also
Mukokuseki and
Amazing Technicolor Population. For characters with impossible hair
styles, see
Anime Hair.
Often subject to
Power Makes Your Hair Grow and might change color further as a result.
Examples
Pinball
- In Banzai Run, Blue Beard's hair is a very light electric blue.
Web Original
Real Life
- The celebrated "Glowing Green Monkeys", who were created by gene-splicing lab monkeys with bioluminescent sea creatures. Their hair only glows under fluorescent light, however, and look more of a dull greenish-brown under normal conditions.
- A potential result of overexposure to cobalt or indigo dyes during industrial processes.
- Purple squirrels have been showing up around the world. Whether or not it's some sort of prank is unknown.
- Can be invoked using hair dye.