Mythical Girl With Black Hair and Red Eyes Moon Art
"Sophie! Your hair! Information technology looks just like starlight. It's beautiful!"
In fiction, white locks on a young grapheme marking them as mystical and arcane, whether it means they are outright magical or non. In sci-fi and fantasy, it'south oft the only not-man hair colour you will see on new species or race of people, especially in elves or Human Aliens. It is a common marking of a Mysterious Waif and a Mystical Waif.
The popularity of this trope probably stems from its status as a borderline-natural hair color: white hair on a young person strikes that delicate balance of beingness unusual but not blatantly unrealistic. The color also lends itself well to symbolism.
It bears repeating that these are young (or at least young-looking) characters and their hair color is not indicative of age (or of premature crumbling).
May as well come with an Ethereal White Apparel.
Run into too White Hair, Blackness Eye, which is where having white hair is a sign of evil instead of magic, superpowers, or otherworldly origins; an albino ability's white hair existence seen as a sign of evil or the supernatural may exist indicative of Albinos Are Freaks. If a grapheme'south hair turns white due to a disease or illness, information technology's Disease Bleach. If a character's hair turns white when they apply their powers, it'southward Power Dyes Your Pilus. Sometimes can be a result of Locked into Strangeness. Meet likewise Bald Mystic, some other hairstyling selection that denotes the supernatural.
Example subpages:
- Anime & Manga
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- Video Games
Other examples:
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Comic Books
- Siahm in Arawn is a silverish-haired Amazon, simply like the balance of her tribe, who are made up of goose egg but white-haired pretty girls. They have some limited magical powers that provide heightened vitality and slowed aging, all granted past drinking the blood of their enemies' hearts.
- DC Comics:
- Teen Titans'due south Rose "Ravager" Wilson, who's been called platinum blonde at least once. Oddly enough, this is supposedly considering her father, Deathstroke, also has white pilus due to the experiment that gave him his powers, which brings up another trope.
- Water ice (Tora Olafsdotter). White hair, blue eyes, and she'due south the princess of a magical northern tribe. Sigrid Nansen (Icemaiden), who served as Tora's temporary replacement in the Justice League International, too had white hair but hers was the issue of a scientific discipline experiment to replicate the mystical ice powers of Tora's tribe.
- The kickoff female person Pigeon, Dawn Granger, in DC'southward Hawk and Dove. In her earlier appearances, only her Pigeon superhero form had white hair, while Dawn was a blonde. In more contempo appearances pre-New 52, she was shown with white hair in both identities — most likely because it fabricated information technology easier to differentiate her from the other two major blonde female characters in Birds of Prey when she joined that team. In her appearances in the New 52 reboot, colorists went back to only coloring her hair white as Dove.
- Dream Daughter / Dreamer, Princess Projectra, and White Witch from the Legion of Super-Heroes.
- Hippolyta (Lyta) Hall, the second Fury, who featured prominently in The Sandman. It's not entirely clear whether this is actually blonde pilus drawn equally white (since a younger Lyta is shown as a blonde, and one graphic symbol refers to her as a blonde as an developed), or if information technology really is white.
- In The Sandman, The Corinthian: A nightmare loose in the waking globe.
- Besides, Daniel Hall a.k.a. Morpheus Ii
- The Phantom Stranger has white hair. His various origin stories, all of which may or may not exist true, all show him having different natural hair colors earlier he became what he is now.
- Subverted with Abby Holland (née Abigail Arcane), Swamp Thing's married woman. She has snow-white pilus with two black streaks running through information technology, but she's not a spellcaster and the white hair comes from her mother's side of the family.
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- Jennifer Morgan, Travis Morgan's daughter and the sorceress supreme of Skartaris in The Warlord. She was originally blonde, but her hair turns white as she gains sorcerous power.
- When Artemis (the goddess, not the hero) was redesigned for Wonder Woman (2011) she was given glowing white hair, which matches her pare and eyes equally she is entirely monochromatic.
- Gaining this is part and parcel of recruitment into the Death Vigil. Sam calls it "the Dye After You Die Society."
- Femforce: Stardust the Homo Alien Science Hero.
- CrossGen's The First had both white-haired Ingra and Wyture, neither of them human being. Negation had Khlystek, the Lizard Lady, a reptilian conflicting with white pilus.
- Lady Death is a white-haired, white-skinned undead demigoddess.
- Luther Arkwright: Luther Arkwright, Victoria, and Gabriel Shelley all have white hair, also every bit a marked lack of body pilus. Information technology is implied that this is the case for nearly Homo Novus, the psychic descendants of humanity.
- Marvel Comics:
- X-Men's Ororo "Tempest" Munroe is a Dark-Skinned Blond(-ish) with, yes, blueish optics. This was somewhen explained as a property she got from her mother'southward inherent magic. Her mother came from a line of Kenyan witches, and during a New Mutants fourth dimension-travel story, 1 of Tempest'south ancestresses in ancient Egypt as well shared the physical characteristics.
- Nate Grey started out with a skunk stripe, like his counterpart, Cable, but at the end of Historic period of X-Human being it went completely white under the influence of the Life Seed. Information technology is no blow that at this bespeak, Nate was more than than just a person, even a Reality Warper, having become a living pocket-reality — in many ways, he was the Age of X-Human being.
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- Physician Strange's disciple/lover/wife Clea, one-half-Faltinian princess of the Dark Dimension. She has a touch of Anime Hair as well.
- Captain Marvel'southward Phyla-Vell a.chiliad.a. Quasar, who is half Titanian (Titanese?) and half Kree.
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- The 10-Men villain Spiral, although she was originally a brunette before her genes were messed with.
- Blastoff Flight's Walter Langkowski, aka Sasquatch, once became a woman later returning from the dead (long story). Going by the name Wanda, she was young and pretty, and had snow-white pilus in both her man and Sasquatch forms.
- Balder Odinson, Thor's one-half-brother and long-fourth dimension friend, returned to the living after making a deal with Hela to defeat 1000 of his previous foes in battle once again to return to life. This took so long that his hair turned white while his Asgardian physiology meant he retained his youthful appearance.
- Subverted with Quicksilver. Although he was born on the extremely mystical Wundagore Mountain (haunt of the elder god Chthon), his white hair apparently is simply inherited from his father Magneto.
- Subverted with the Blackness True cat. She has natural white hair (officially platinum blonde) but was originally a Badass Normal. She acquired superpowers when she felt she was a liability on the battlefield. A straighter example would be The Ultimate Universe which reimagines her as a Mutant (though in that case, she wore a wig) and Spider-Man: The Animated Series which grants her the power to alter her pilus from blonde to white when she powers up.
- All of the Metabarons have long white hair, if they accept any. For some reason, even the women they bring into the family from other clans accept long white pilus.
- Sabrina the Teenage Witch: Sabrina used to accept platinum blonde hair but in the 1990s she was redesigned to be a brighter shade of blonde. She is half-witch. In Chilling Adventures of Sabrina her original hair color was blonde merely it had turned white past her teenage years, likely due to her witch heritage.
- Gabrielle from Spawn is an angel who has pure white hair.
- Suprema has white hair every bit a side outcome of exposure to Supremium, the source of her powers.
- Phondari in Warlord of Mars is a Grey Skinned Space Babe with platinum blonde hair.
- There's Wolf Gal, a white-haired woman Raised past Wolves, from Lil Abner.
Fan Works
- In How I Became Yours, an Avatar: The Terminal Airbender fan comic, Princess Azula undergoes a mystic transformation like to that of Princess Yue in the series' canon, and is endued with white hair as part of her supernatural connection to the powers of winter and the moon.
- League of Boggling Gentlemen: Tempest Rewrite: Part of Mina's new look equally Mysta of the Moon.
- The Dark Unfurls: The Plain Doll has silver pilus, with an ancient ability stirring within.
- Shen Yuan from The Untold Tale is a celestial existence with fortune-telling powers, and also an albino with white hair.
- Lunarstar from Worlds Autonomously (MLP) is an all-white Winged Unicorn who is also the reincarnation of an all-white Feathered Dragon. She'southward the merely magical pony in her world.
Films — Animation
- Kida from Disney's Atlantis: The Lost Empire. White hair seems to be a racial trait of all the Atlanteans, suggestive of their longevity (but non their age — the children have white hair, likewise).
- Frozen:
- Queen Elsa has platinum blonde (or every bit Disney describes it, white-blonde) hair that's indicative of her powers. Word of God says that if she had no powers, she would be a brunette like her mother.
- Princess Anna has naturally strawberry-blonde hair with a platinum blonde streak as a result of being struck by Elsa's powers when she was five. When Anna's heart is frozen solid, her hair gradually begins to turn white. Sharp-eyed viewers will note that Anna's hair turns literally white instead of platinum blonde.
- Taarna from Heavy Metal. Likewise, the girl at the stop develops white pilus after she's revealed every bit Taarna's reincarnation.
- In the anime adaptation of Howl's Moving Castle, Sophie'due south hair remains pale grey one time her curse of quondam historic period is cleaved and she has come into her latent magical abilities.
- Lady Amalthea, the human form of the title unicorn in The Last Unicorn, has long flowing white hair. "The young girl... she looks so strange! There's a newness about her," comments Prince Lir.
- Susan/Ginormica from Monsters vs. Aliens: her hair was originally brownish, but afterward getting hit past a Magic Shooting star total of quantonium, it turned white and she grew into a giant fifty-pes woman. Interestingly, her hair remains white fifty-fifty after the quantonium gets extracted from her body and she gets Brought Down to Normal.
- Jack Frost from Rise of the Guardians, coupled with blueish eyes. He originally had brownish hair and eyes before he died.
- Aisling from The Secret of Kells has white hair, since she's a fairy. A prequel comic shows that this is a racial trait of The Fair Folk.
- Brunhilde from Thor: Tales of Asgard has white hair, which makes her stand out from the residual of the valkyries whom she leads, that accept blonde hair.
Films — Alive-Activity
- Mirana, the White Queen from Tim Burton'south Alice in Wonderland (2010). She is one of the nigh powerful people in the country, matched only by her sis, the Ruddy Queen.
- Yun Fei-Yang, the kung fu disciple from Bastard Swordsman, afterward learning the forbidden martial arts technique of the Silkworm kung-fu, take his hair turning argent white.
- Ni Chan, too known every bit the White-Haired Witch, from The Forbidden Kingdom.
- The titular character from The Helpmate With White Pilus, who started off with normal black hair until the day she was betrayed past her lover; learning to increment her inner qi to a whole new level, her hair turns silver-white overnight and can lash out as whip-like appendages capable of shredding through flesh.
- The titular heroine of Wolf Devil Woman, the Taiwanese movie which inspired The Bride With White Hair. Being raised by a white wolf somehow has her pilus naturally growing silver-white.
- Princess Nuala and her brother Nuada from Hellboy II: The Gilt Army both have long silvery pilus, a mutual trait among elves.
- In Underworld: Blood Wars, the vampires from the Scandinavian Coven possessed silver-hair equally a outcome of going through a cocooning procedure that granted some unusual abilities not seen in other members of their species (such every bit teleportation-like speed and soul reading), as well as increasing already existing abilities to higher levels. When Selene undergoes the same transformation, she gains streaks of white hair along with these powers.
- X-Men Motion picture Series
- Tempest is a white-haired adult female with weather manipulation/summoning powers.
- Quicksilver from X-Men: Days of Future Past, has silver hair. And while he is fond of breaking the police force, he'southward non much of a White Pilus, Blackness Centre like in the comics. Equally does his Avengers: Historic period of Ultron counterpart.
Live-Action TV
- Willow in the Flavor 7 finale of Buffy the Vampire Slayer when she infuses every Potential Slayer in the world with the same powers Buffy and Faith have in gild to defeat the First Evil. Even Kennedy calls her "a goddess" as a effect.
- Yuki from the live-action Cutey Dear The Live had white hair when she "flashed" into her battle form.
- Lexi Stonemason, the psychic starchild in Falling Skies, has long white hair (except in shared dreams, when information technology'due south blackness). All the Masons as well her have black hair.
- Chiana in Farscape. A characteristic of her species, apparently — the women take white hair (with prominent dark roots) and the men have blackness hair.
- Daenerys Targaryen (natural brunette Emilia Clarke in a white wig) in Game of Thrones, who has silver-blonde hair due to her Targaryen ancestry. She'southward at least burn-absorbent.
- The Other Kingdom: Princess Astral and her mother Queen Titania both accept white hair, and they happen to exist the fairy princess and queen of their kingdom Athenia.
Mythology & Religion
- In Classical Mythology, Epimeliads were nymphs associated with apple trees and protectors of sheep and goats. They usually had hair white like apple blossoms or undyed wool, showing their special bond with the flock and fruit trees.
- The Book of Revelation depicts the divine class of Jesus every bit having hair equally white as wool.
- In the pre-Christian Hungarian faith, it was believed that children built-in with white pilus had magic powers and thus were destined to become shamans.
Pinball
- Both the protagonist of Magic Girland the Large Bad wizard take stringy white hair.
Tabletop Games
- I redesign of Princess Frostina from Candy Country has her with white hair, though traditionally she has blue pilus and newer incarnations give her blonde hair. She is an elegant princess with water ice powers.
- The Whites in CthulhuTech are completely white (skin, eyes, and hair), on the average more attractive than either humans or Nazzadi, AND all natural para-psychics.
- In Dungeons & Dragons Night elves, or drow, also count every bit Dark-Skinned Blonde (despite living underground for thousands of years, which y'all'd remember would have the opposite effect; though, at least in one gameworld, they're described as being cursed into that grade and so no-one would error them). And since they're elves, they tend to be very expert-looking (drow are fifty-fifty described every bit beingness more bonny on average than other elves, on top of looking exotic). They took this to massive race-wide Ms. Fanservice levels. The good ones took to dancing naked in the moonlight. The evil ones considered wearing armor admission of fearfulness and weakness earlier rival houses. The females would often wander their cities nude or nearly so, flaying live anyone who was Distracted by the Sexy with whips made of snakes unless they decided the male would make a worthy addition to their harem and let him audition for the role of pleasure slave. Pretty is not nice at all.
- Arianna from Exalted was the iconic Twilight Caste for the starting time couple of editions, sporting a long ponytail of stark white hair and regularly showing off her mastery of sorcery.
- Avacyn from Magic: The Gathering'due south Innistrad pack is a white-haired affections. Helps with the Night Is Not Evil motif since she wears all black.
- Nobilis has the Excrucian Iolithae Septimian, a Consummate Liar who is able to deceive reality itself.
- Pathfinder: Feiya the witch, Balazar the summoner, Merisiel the rogue (who's an elf), and Seltyiel the magus (who'southward a half-elf). Seoni the wizard is platinum blonde, so it would appear that Paizo is fond of this trope.
- In Psionics: The Next Phase in Human Evolution the esper representing the Stormbringer classic has this. It is probably not a coincidence that magnekinesis (the ability to control the conditions) is highly symbolically of import to The Zodiac Order and that summoning weather is a common type of ritual magic worldwide.
- Nightmist of Sentinels of the Multiverse is a powerful mage with glowing white pilus. The carte du jour "Regression Darts" reveals that the white hair actually stems directly from the magic; when her connection to magic is cut off by those darts, it turns chocolate-brown.
- Many Sisters of Boxing from Warhammer xl,000 have white pilus which reinforces their angelic/Joan Of Classic advent (though this is heavily implied to exist the result of dyeing). Whether they're actually pretty varies from creative person to artist, with some casting them as your standard pretty Amazon Brigade, and others sit down and recall about how a life of fighting (oft without a helmet) would actually make them look similar.
- Warhammer Fantasy: Wizards oftentimes gain minor physical and mental changes from exposure to their preferred Wind of Magic. For Celestial Wizards and Low-cal Wizards, this generally turns their pilus pure white, alongside other furnishings.
Toys
- In My Little Pony nearly white-haired ponies subvert the trope and are perfectly normal just others fit the trope:
- Majesty from G1 is a unicorn pony introduced in Yr two who has a white pelt and has a white stripe in her bluish hair. She is not officially a "princess", simply lives in a castle and has a dragon like the later introduced princesses. Majesty has extraordinary abilities when it comes to magic. In the British My Little Pony comics she can utilize multiple types of magic, unlike the other ponies who specialize in only i type of magic. Majesty watches over the other ponies using a magic mirror and a crystal ball. She also has horseshoes that turn her invisible.
- Princess Argent Swirl from G2 is an all-white unicorn mare who is described every bit being a guardian angel to other ponies.
- Star Catcher was the starting time pegasus introduced in G3 and is the most unusual of the pegasi. She is white-furred with multi-colored hair. Star Catcher has a more refined vocalism than most other characters (who have more cartoony voices), she is very calm and understanding, and she tin can make wishes come truthful. She is also the unofficial leader of the pegasus, she is referred to as one of the most cute ponies out there, and her wings stand out amongst the other pegasus. It's stated in G3 that pegasus are rare and mystical, even so Star Catcher is the only ane who actually displays these traits.
Theater
- In some theatrical adaptations of A Christmas Carol, such equally the one by Seattle's A Contemporary Theatre, the Ghost of Christmas Past is depicted with white or light blonde hair.
Visual Novels
- The Nobles (including Aida) in Ascension have this.
- Mysterious Waif Chou from Ballad of an Evening Butterfly has white hair. It probably has to practice with her albinism, the fact she'south from an unusual species (that are very similar to vampires), and her mysterious powers.
- The Nasuverse seems to honey this trope, and it often indicates that the character in question isn't human:
- Ilyasviel von Einzbern and her maids Sella and Leysritt from Fate/stay nighttime, as well as Ilya'south mother Irisviel. In their instance, information technology's genetic since Einzbern homunculi are descendants (or, more than appropriately, clones) of Lizleihi Justica von Einzbern, who had the same white pilus and scarlet optics. They too carry parts of her personality and even memories.
- Dark Sakura also has white hair and ruby eyes as part of her Evil Makeover.
- White Len from the Melty Blood games has calorie-free grayness hair.
- Merlin, who is definitively i of the greatest mages who always lived as per backstory and background material, has white hair.
- There are several characters who have white hair when summoned as Servants but did not in their human lives. Archer in Fate/stay night is a Future Badass version of Shirou Emiya who became a Counter-Guardian and thus eligible for summoning as a Servant, while in Fate/1000 Order, ane of the Assassinator-class Servants is an alternate version of Shirou'south begetter, Fate/Zero protagonist Kiritsugu Emiya, who also became a Counter-Guardian. Grand Order also has Rex Solomon, who equally a Servant has white pilus merely in his human form equally Dr. Roman is a redhead.
- Mysterious Waif Phi from Virtue'south Last Advantage knows Sigma's name before he has a chance to mention it. She likewise demonstrates the power to remember many things that only happened in other timelines.
- In the follow-up game Aught Fourth dimension Dilemma, the trope is subverted: it turns out she dyes her hair white considering she's ashamed of her natural pilus color, red.
- In Seven Kingdoms: The Princess Problem, all native inhabitants of Vail Island take white hair, in a setting where everyone else is coloured ordinarily. (Jasper has not only odd white hair just odd purple eyes.) It underlines their mystique and incredible competence, though the islanders are no more magical than anyone else...and even if they were, they wouldn't tell anyone.
- Mystic Messenger mostly lacks supernatural elements, notwithstanding the team white-haired pretty boy Zen has inexplicable psychic dreams in a couple routes and a borderline Healing Factor.
- In Phoenix Wright: Ace Chaser – Spirit of Justice, the Khura'inese prosecutor Nahyuta Sahdmadhi has white pilus and is a respected monk who may have some mystic power. He got both from his mother, the quondam queen Amara, who is a spirit medium.
- In Spirit Hunter: NG, the first thing that Akira notices near Kakuya is her long, snow-white hair, which combines with her traditional Japanese dress to give her a mysterious, otherworldly appearance.
Web Blitheness
- Cielle, the clairvoyant magic shop owner from Broken Saints, has white pilus, courtesy of albinism.
- Bai Yuxiu of Feng Ling Yu Xiu has it, and it is commented on with some frequency. Her strange abilities are a source of intrigue for the series'southward antagonists. It has been suggested that she did not ever accept this, as a similarly dressed daughter with similar blueish eyes and dark hair is shown in the bear witness'south opening.
Webcomics
- Chloe from Angel Downwards has extremely long white hair due to her being a Nephilim
- Kili Stormcrow, a shaman of The Dragon Doctors, has bleach-white pilus due to an incident as a child—Kili developed spiritual vision so strong that Kili's perception was trapped in the spirit world. Kili's pilus has become permanently white.
- Drowtales: Using the models of drow as depicted in Dungeons & Dragons, depicts every drow built-in underground every bit having white hair and the latent ability to utilise magic.
- In El Goonish Shive, both
Hanma and Voltaire seem to accept this. The former has dark skin and the latter seems to take pure white skin. Both combinations are not seen even in other Immortals which mark them as unusual.
- Zenobia in Gamble'due south Wake has white hair, possibly related to her (well-nigh likely) being a demon.
- Homestuck:
- Rose and Roxy both have white hair like Dave and Dirk, and accept shown an interest in magic, with Roxy existence a large fan of wizards and Rose dual-wielding magic wands as her Weapon of Selection. All the same, while depending on your headcanon this trope could utilize, technically this white pilus is just a result of the (intentionally ambiguous) art style. In all likelihood, Rose and Roxy have light blonde or orange hair.
- Calliope is a better example, except that it's a white wig, and she'south really bald. She wears it to cosplay as her Trollsona who bears a striking resemblance to Calmasis, a character in Post-Scratch Rose's books.
- Lei'ella from Inverloch, which marks her as one of the Severed, mortal, magicless elves with silvery pilus and not-so Supernatural Gold Eyes. "Healthy" elves have dark-brown/blond/black hair. The ane exception is Kayn'dar, who had magic despite this coloration, hence is considered The Messiah of some sort.
- Impale 6 Billion Demons: Allison receives white hair from a Superpowered Evil Side granted by a Deal with the Devil. Even afterward the evil side is dealt with, the white hair colour remains fifty-fifty later a later Fourth dimension Skip.
- Robot Daughter Ping from Megatokyo had white hair early on on, before her body started changing in response to her character development.
- Roy's girlfriend Celia in The Social club of the Stick. Equally a sylph, she's innately magical and an inversion of Closer to Earth, existence from the Elemental Aeroplane of Air.
- Corrick of Plume, an immortal Guardian Entity gifted with absurdly overpowered magic, has gotten white pilus upon his ascension to a magical being.
- Angels in Slightly Damned have naturally snowfall-white hair (only it is difficult to see because their civilisation demands they dye their hair the same colour as their element) and are the most magically powerful
of all races.
- TwoKinds: Raine Silverlock, a young woman on the comic'south "team B", certainly qualifies this trope, having human knee-length silver pilus, and an incredible raw magical potential (Although she has no command over it, no cheers to her mother...).
- Unsounded: The Platinum caste of Alderode have pure white hair and an unusually strong connectedness to the Background Magic Field of the Khert. 1 of the major religions teaches that they're beloved by the Gods and are at the finish of their cycle of Reincarnation, which takes some of the sting off their 30-year lifespan.
Web Original
- The anomalings from Almost Nowhere are actually EldritchAbominations but frequently talk to the protagonists via 'humanoid shades' the most prominent of which, Micheal, is described as having flowing white hair despite otherwise looking, "non a solar day over thirty". Notably this is an intentional corrective option and Micheal has been demonstrated to accept almost unlimited command over his appearance.
- On the Dream SMP, Boomer has white hair, and from what his content creator analogue has revealed, information technology's indicated that his hair was sapped of its original blond colour in exchange for mystical powers that can exist harnessed through his Nice Lid.
- Nasha of SPAZ has white Rapunzel Hair, and while she's non magical, she'due south definitely a little strange
Web Videos
- Lys, the Source of life in the Noob franchise, who is a Physical Goddess who looks like a teenager co-ordinate to the novels and is played by a fairly young woman in the web-movies.
Western Blitheness
- Avatar: The Final Airbender: Princess Yue's pilus color was a plot point. She was actually built-in (or rather still-born) with dark hair like everyone else in the water tribe (and pretty much anybody in the four nations). When the moon-spirit saved her infant life, her hair turned pure white and remained that way all her life.
- Charmcaster from Ben x is a silver-haired sorceress.
- Danny Phantom, Danny and Dani's half-ghost forms.
- In Disenchantment, protagonist Bean has white hair, as did her female parent, Dagmar. Dagmar is a Wicked Witch, and Edible bean has clearly inherited some sort of magic from her.
- Rayla from The Dragon Prince is a moonshadow elf, and as such has white hair. These elves magically draw their powers from the moon. As it turns out, all of the Moonshadow elves have white hair.
- In a darker shade on this, Claudia's hair starts going white when she overtaxes himself on dark magic. She gets a skunk stripe to fix Soren's paralysis, then about half of it white when she resurrects Viren.
- Queen La from The Legend of Tarzan has white pilus. Serves as a Mythology Gag to the original Edgar Rice Burroughs stories describing the city of Opar as an Atlantean colony city, hence the design reference to Atlantis: The Lost Empire.
- Nefertina from Mummies Alive! had white hair and pale gray peel in her undead mummy course. In that location was some inconsistency in her coloring throughout the serial. In some of the flashback scenes where she was nonetheless alive, sometimes, she was shown with blackness hair, and sometimes, she was shown with white hair. And yes, she, besides, was voiced by Cree Summer (guess which other character Cree voiced that Nefertina resembled!).
- "The Bang-up and Powerful" Trixie from My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic has this sort of hair, though with shades of light blue. She's a stage magician in improver to being a unicorn, hence it reinforces her supernatural attraction. Played straight with her human counterpart in My Piddling Pony: Equestria Girls, whose hair is completely white with the same blue streaks.
- Like her parents, Allura from Voltron: Legendary Defender has night peel and white hair, every bit was common on her home planet, Altea. Later on, this happens to Shiro as his soul is revived into a clone body with Allura'southward magic, gaining a full head of argent hair.
Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/MysticalWhiteHair
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