Talk:Ken Kaneki/@comment-26039903-20150225082924/@comment-5513888-20150226030207

writers and artists tend to put a lot of thought in the composition of their work, so the first anon would actually be right: Ishida does what he does for a reason.

However, given the characteristics of hair, the alterations may not hold any symbolic meaning, as Ishida would be changing it (not out of randomness) because naturally Haise's hair isn't always going to be positioned the same way, and the pigments of his hair don't just stop cold turky either. The black hairs mix with the white as you travel away from the top of Kaneki's head. If anything, the last panel, for example, simply shows the gradation of this shift in pigment more than the previous pictures, and the previous pictures, acknowledging that the shift in hair color does not work like the layers of a cake and set organized, are slightly different.