Long, dark brown. Yes, they were nice.
(A bit wet after the curse, by the way.)
the smile fell from his face so cruelly...
Personally, I love the hair during the curse.
It's amazing, or rather eerie, that the fact that he was completely underwater at the moment of death-he was most likely drowning and desperately fighting for his life, also earlier choked by the smoke, etc.-and the explosion from the ship finished him off-a hole in his head (it hits you differently when you realize he perfectly remembered the exact moment he lost consciousness...)-the curse imprinted this message and characteristic on his gravitational field.
That's kind of WOOOW.
They all have gravitational fields, working the same way, but "terrestrial," with typical normal gravity. Salazar and Magda's gravity (didn't pay that much attention if also someone else) works in this truly aquatic way because of their place of death.
(Oh no, that means Magda drowned. The fact that his legs were torn off didn't kill him; he was alive, and then, unable to kick his legs to swim, drowned in water with a lot of his own blood... oh God, what he must have been through 😓)
But that must be a feature of the curse, certainly not a matter of physics-density, etc. If that were the case, they wouldn't be able to run effectively because they'd be kind of pulled backward. (know that feeling when in the swimming pool?)
In the triangle, Salazar's hair was dark turquoise, shiny/reflective in brighter color (it looked amazing), something like a darkened sea color, but in a less natural version.
Outside the triangle, in most situations it looked darker, maybe even black, with individual dark-sea hairs (he's going gray, lol).
But, interestingly, at the seabed level... they
seemed again as before, in the triangle.
I wonder if, theoretically, they could be another indicator of the charge or state of the gravitational field, since they changed color to... duller and darker after leaving the triangle, where he was more powerful. And they regained the dark-sea color when he was holding the trident, which gave him lots of power again. It's an interesting theory. It's like an aquarium with water and dye and a light bulb attached - you connect the bulb to a power source, and the water becomes brighter. I see a certain analogy here. It could be so.
Oh, and one more thing - even though he's certainly used to his hair getting in his face and sometimes obscuring his vision, he must have been really irritated at first (I once saw a story somewhere about their first hunt in the triangle, where the captain stood on the deck of the unlucky-fated pirate ship and choked on his own hair-). But despite this, he seems to have control over this field. Notice how when he landed behind Barbossa, his hair moved away from his face like a theater curtain.
The effect is almost as if he were pushing the hair away from his face with his fingers.
It's easy to imagine that it would normally stay still, and if he started headbanging, the effect would be even more irritating.
Considering what he can do to the ship, it seems simply logical and obvious that he can modify and influence his own gravity field as well.
(I wonder how many times he pranked the crew out of boredom by messing with their gravity fields.)
Sorry, I wasn't supposed to write about that hair, xD












