I'm confused by your example Ravin' Ray. That cover has two brunettes and a blonde doesn't it??
In the "classic" Sabrina comics as drawn by Dan DeCarlo, Sabrina Spellman had really light blond hair. In her modern versions, it is canon that her hair is naturally (or supernatually?) white. In this 2019 series, on her first day at her new high school, she gives herself a tint so that she will appear as less of a freak:
Sabrina2019reboot_WhiteHair1.jpg
but it doesn't last.
Sabrina2019reboot_WhiteHair2.jpg
I wouldnt think you would have to unless you want. The rules states and other hair color if it is distinctive. In your cover she has white hair. Not blonde like in the early comics or tv show. I think people can separate that.
I was just pointing out the color in the tv show. But the cover is not the tv show
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Human Torch/Fantastic Four/She-Hulk/Disney Big Hero 6 /Tangled/G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero/Transformers G1 fanatic, Avatar-maker, and Marvel Moderator
"一人じゃないから。" AI、『Story』。
"ヒロ、お前を信じてる。" タダシ、『ベイマックス』。
"You were my my new dream." "And you were mine." Eugene Fitzherbert and Rapunzel.
"Knowing is half the battle." G.I. Joe.
Know the CBR Community STANDARDS & RULES
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It's not an entry, but maybe my favorite dramatic comic strip from the 1960s and 1970s was Apartment 3-G, in which three women shared an apartment in Manhattan. Artist Alex Kotzky modeled the redhead after Lucille Ball, the blonde after Tuesday Weld, and the brunette after Joan Collins.