Do adult platinum blond people have bona fide platinum blond pubic hair as well?
Do adult platinum blond people have bona fide platinum blond pubic hair as well?
Does the carpet almost always match the drapes?
Ivanna beleeve
Do adult platinum blond people have bona fide platinum blond pubic hair as well?
Does the carpet almost always match the drapes?
Ivanna beleeve
Some day, when you grow up, you too will see naked adult women. In the meantime, you can do research online...I recommend pubmed, base and core, as well as anatomical atlas.
I thought until now that all platinum blonde hair was a result of dyeing, and in that case, I don't see why you couldn't dye any hair whatever you wanted, but it sounds like there are rare cases where adults do have it naturally:
https://nordicperspective.com/facts/scandinavian-traits-looks
Natural platinum blonde or near-white hair occurs occasionally among the population in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland, and Iceland, primarily among children (as hair tends to darken with age).
Very few adult Scandinavians have natural platinum blonde hair, but plenty has achieved this hair color by means of artificial coloring (as in the rest of the world).
So TIL.
Looking online, I see material mostly saying that there can be variation among all of head, eyebrow and pubic hair, but that generally head hair is the lightest, and eyerows and pubic hair tend to be closer.
I do see some people claiming that their eyebrow and pubic hair color do not match, so assuming that this is accurate, you probably don't have a guarantee.
True or false? I don't think it's true, but my husband claims the color of your eyebrows is more or less the same as the color of your pubic hair (yes, this is the kind of subject that comes up out of the blue during breakfast, sigh). In my case it seems to be correct (blonde hair, black eyebrows, black pubic hair) but I guess this is a coincidence?
False. Super white eyebrows and lashes. Dishwater blonde hair. Dishwater to Light brown pubic hair. My ex used to joke about it to his friends.
That does make me think, though...I think that we have all the tools necessary to give someone natural hair of whatever color in 2025. It would not be quick or inexpensive, but it sounds like we do have the technology.
First, remove the existing hair:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrology
Electrology is the practice of electrical hair removal to permanently remove human hair from the body. Electrolysis is the actual process of removing hair using electricity.
In electrolysis, a qualified professional called an electrologist slides a hair-thin, solid metal probe into each hair follicle without puncturing the skin (when inserted properly). Electricity is delivered to the follicle through the probe, which causes localized damage to the areas that generate hairs, either through the formation of caustic sodium hydroxide (the galvanic method), overheating (thermolysis), or both (the blend method).
Take skin cells from the patient.
Genetically-edit to obtain hair of given color.
From that, grow new skin that's genetically compatible:
https://news.uq.edu.au/2025-08-uq-scientists-grow-living-skin-world-first
“We took human skin cells and reprogrammed them into stem cells, which can be turned into any type of cell in the body,” Dr Shafiee said.
University of Queensland researchers have been the first in the world to successfully grow fully functioning human skin in a laboratory.
The research team at UQ’s Frazer Institute used stem cells to create a replica of human skin, complete with blood vessels, capillaries, hair follicles, layers of tissue and immune cells.
Then transplant the hair follicles back into the patient.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_transplantation
With Follicular Unit Extraction or FUE harvesting, individual follicular units containing 1 to 4 hairs are removed under local anesthesia; this micro removal typically uses tiny punches of between 0.6mm and 1.0mm in diameter. The surgeon then uses very small micro blades or fine needles to puncture the sites for receiving the grafts, placing them in a predetermined density and pattern, and angling the wounds in a consistent fashion to promote a realistic hair pattern. The technicians generally do the final part of the procedure, inserting the individual grafts in place.
FUE takes place in a single long session or multiple small sessions. The FUE procedure is more time-consuming than strip surgery. An FUE surgery time varies according to the surgeons experience, speed in harvesting and patient characteristics. The procedure can take anywhere from a couple hours to extract 200 grafts for a scar correction to a surgery over two consecutive days for a megasession of 2,500 to 3,000 grafts.
Robotic hair restoration
Robotic hair restoration devices utilize cameras and robotic arms to assist the surgeon with the FUE procedure. In 2009, NeoGraft became the first robotic surgical device FDA approved for hair restoration.[8] The ARTAS System was FDA approved in 2011 for use in harvesting follicular units from brown-haired and black-haired men.[9]
So if you had the time, money, and determination, I imagine that you could probably get natural platinum blonde pubic hair if you were set on it.
In practice, my guess is that it's probably preferable to dye it.
I had a GF with blonde hair and blonde pubes.
I think it's fairly rare, though.
I had a natural blonde girlfriend who had bright red pubic hair. Genetics are weird.
I've met guys with naturally blonde hair and red beards. Wonder if that's the same gene?
Before I turned grey, all my body hair was very light blond except for my beard which was mixed blond and red.