Yes. Human hair is dead anyways, so coloring it alive or dead doesn't make a bit of difference. If your hair was alive it would hurt to get a haircut =) your hair is mostly made of keratin (protein), thus making it grow....and Hair and nails continue to grow for a short period of time after death so, the deceased might need that touch up color.
Cosmetologist and Certified Instructor of 11 years
Hair is already dead. There is no blood supply to the hair itself only to the follicle where it grows from. If you are asking about a dead persons hair then it is the same colour it was when they were alive.
Its changes the colour.. of the persons hair...
Yes, in fact a persons hair will keep growing a bit after you die.
Because she I half and half she is African and American, so the color of her hair is more like a black persons but the texture of her hair is like a white persons.
hair and teeth can both be used for identification of a person either dead or alive. Hair contains a persons unique DNA and they can search dental records on a persons teeth
Gray hair is not dead hair. It is hair that has lost its pigment, resulting in a gray or white color. The hair follicle is still alive and continues to grow, but with less pigment production.
I have hair on the inside of my arms. I quess it just depends on the persons age and how hairy they get, plus hair color.
No, grey hair is not considered dead hair. Grey hair occurs when the pigment cells in hair follicles stop producing melanin, the pigment that gives hair its color. This change in pigment production is a natural part of the aging process and does not mean that the hair is dead.
he has none because he is dead
ten years
Hair is not living. Once it has grown out of the skin it is no longer living. Color has no bearing on it.
There would be no definite correlation. It would just be a random correlation that would be all over the graph because there is no trend in hair color and weight. Your weight doesn't determine your hair color.