Yes, if you watched the original Z (and not Kai), Vegeta always had this color scheme. This was the color palette that Vegeta (and Nappa, as his armor isn't quite the same color as it was depicted with when they reached Earth) were originally depicted when first shown, as those first episodes were animated prior to the first full. Toei Animation's recent Vegeta anniversary post reminds old school Dragon Ball Z fans that the iconic Saiyan prince once had a much different look.
Vegeta - Dragon Ball Z Cartoon Color Scheme The Vegeta - Dragon Ball Z Cartoon Color Scheme has 6 colors, which are Corn (#F9EE54), American Yellow (#F3A903), Windsor Tan (#A56106), Lumber (#FFE1CD), New Car (#2955DC) and Space Cadet (#181463). The RGB and CMYK values of the colors are in the table below along with the closest RAL and PANTONE® numbers. Click on a color chip to view shades.
Find and save ideas about vegeta original color on Pinterest. Vegeta Color Palette This Vegeta from Dragon Ball Z Series has Black, Blue, Brown, Gray, Skin & Yellow Colors. In Vegeta's first appearance in the anime, the legendary prince appears with the red hair and green and orange armor, a decidedly different aspect than what it looks like when it arrives on earth.
The first few episodes of the anime that depicted Vegeta were animated prior to his first colored appearance within the manga, and Toriyama had yet to give Toei Animation the color schemes for either him or Nappa. These days, Vegeta's look is instantly recognizable. With his black hair, blue suit, and white and gold armor, his look is iconic.
However, in the anime's early days, Vegeta's color scheme was almost completely different, having light brown hair, a dark blue suit with a green and orange set of armor. It was filler and the anime didn't have vegeta's original hair color. Also in the colored manga his scouter was green instead of red.
Reply reply Magnusthelast. The german voice actor for Spongebob (Santiago Ziesmer) is pretty great, but in my and probably many others opinion, it didn't fit for Vegeta, DBZ aired first in Germany in 2001 and one of his more popular prior jobs was Steve Urkel.