Female cartoon characters with curly hair always stand out to me.
Maybe it’s because curls are hard to ignore. They bounce, frame the face, take over the silhouette, and occasionally look like they have their own emotional subplot.
And honestly? I respect that.
In animation, curly hair is rarely just hair. It can signal confidence, rebellion, softness, wild energy, cultural identity, creativity, awkwardness, or “this character is about to ignore every rule adults made for her.”
Which, frankly, is a mood.
Female Cartoon Characters With Curly Hair
This list celebrates female cartoon characters with curly hair who made their curls part of their identity.
Some have big curly hair. Some have soft waves. Some have wild red curls that could defeat a comb in single combat. And some have hair so iconic that I can recognize the character from the silhouette alone.
How I picked these curly-haired cartoon girls:
- Hair identity: curls are a major part of the character’s look.
- Recognition: I wanted characters whose hair helps make them instantly memorable.
- Personality match: the curls should feel connected to the character’s energy, not randomly pasted on.
- Range: Disney, Nickelodeon, adult animation, kids’ shows, and classic cartoon icons all made the cut.
Curly hair in cartoons can do a lot. It adds volume, motion, personality, and attitude before a character even says a word.
And if you’ve ever fought with a curl that had its own agenda, you already know: this hair type deserves screen time.
Miranda Killgallen
From: As Told by Ginger
Hair vibe: Dark purple curls with attitude.
My take: Miranda’s hair matches her personality perfectly: sharp, stylish, and not exactly here to make Ginger’s life easier.
Miranda Killgallen is one of those characters whose look tells me immediately that she is going to cause social complications.
She has dark purple curly hair, a confident style, and the kind of presence that says, “I have opinions, and unfortunately for everyone else, I will be sharing them.”
Miranda Killgallen is a main character and antagonist in As Told by Ginger, often clashing with Ginger because of her friendship with Courtney.
Her curls add to her standout design. They make her feel bold and visually distinct, especially alongside her purple-heavy wardrobe and strong personality.
She also fits naturally into the wider world of purple cartoon characters, because Miranda knows how to commit to a color palette.
Reggie Rocket – Rocket Power
From: Rocket Power
Hair vibe: Long curly purple hair with sporty 90s energy.
My take: Reggie looks like she could land a trick, write a zine, and call out bad decisions before lunch.
Reggie Rocket is one of my favorite cartoon girls with curly hair because her design feels active.
Her long curly purple hair, sunglasses, magenta shirt, camo pants, and red sneakers all scream late-90s extreme-sports confidence.
But Reggie isn’t just “the cool girl” of the group.
She’s often the voice of reason, especially when Otto decides that common sense is optional.
Her curls fit her perfectly because they add motion and personality. She feels fun, grounded, bold, and just rebellious enough to be interesting.
Missy Foreman-Greenwald (Big Mouth)

From: Big Mouth
Hair vibe: Brown curls tied closely to identity and self-discovery.
My take: Missy’s hair journey is one of the few times a cartoon hairstyle actually feels like character development.
Missy Foreman-Greenwald starts with thick brown curls, a headband, and a style that reflects her earlier awkward, bookish energy.
But her look evolves as she starts exploring her racial identity and sense of self.
That’s what makes Missy stand out on this list.
Her curly hair isn’t just a visual detail. It becomes part of how the show talks about growing up, identity, confidence, and figuring out who you are when everyone else keeps trying to define you first.
Also, if cartoons are going to make puberty horrifying, the least they can do is give the character a meaningful hair arc.
Tip Tucci – Home

From: Home
Hair vibe: Medium curly brown hair with adventurous energy.
My take: Tip feels like the kind of character who would save the day and still complain that everyone made it harder than necessary.
Tip Tucci has the kind of curly hair design that feels practical and expressive at the same time.
Her medium-length curls, often tied back in the TV series, match her energetic personality. She’s smart, sassy, impulsive, and deeply loyal to the people she loves.
I like Tip because her design feels lived-in. She isn’t polished like a princess or exaggerated like a gag character. She feels like a real kid thrown into a very unreal adventure.
And honestly, if aliens invaded and I had to save my mom, my hair would also be doing whatever it wanted.
Ginger Foutley – As Told by Ginger
From: As Told by Ginger
Hair vibe: Curly red hair that matches her name and personality.
My take: Ginger’s curls feel like middle school in hair form: expressive, awkward, memorable, and constantly changing.
Ginger Foutley stands out immediately because of her curly red hair.
Her design is simple, but her hair gives her instant personality. It feels expressive and slightly imperfect in a way that matches the emotional honesty of As Told by Ginger.
During middle school, she often wears matching hair barrettes, then grows out of that style later.
That small change actually matters. Ginger’s hair helps show where she is in life—awkward, growing, trying things, and slowly becoming more comfortable with herself.
Very relatable, minus the Nickelodeon lighting.
Mirabel Madrigal

From: Encanto
Hair vibe: Chin-length black curls with a warm, expressive look.
My take: Mirabel’s curls are part of why she feels so approachable, like the magical family member who still has to find her shoes.
Mirabel Madrigal is one of the best modern Disney characters with curly hair.
Her chin-length black curls, thick eyebrows, freckles, round green glasses, embroidered blouse, and colorful skirt all make her instantly recognizable.
And I love that she doesn’t look like a standard polished Disney heroine.
Mirabel’s design feels personal. Her curls add softness, movement, and individuality, while her glasses make her feel even more specific and memorable.
She also fits perfectly with other cartoon characters with glasses, because those lime green frames are doing excellent supporting work.
Marge Simpson – The Simpsons
From: The Simpsons
Hair vibe: Towering blue curly beehive, possibly visible from low orbit.
My take: Marge’s hair is not just a hairstyle. It is architecture.
Marge Simpson has one of the most famous cartoon hairstyles ever, curly or otherwise.
Her tall blue beehive is absurd, iconic, and somehow perfectly normal within the logic of The Simpsons.
It’s not loose curly hair like Merida or Moana, but it absolutely belongs in the conversation because the shape and texture define her silhouette.
Marge’s hair is character branding at its finest. I could see only the outline and know exactly who it is.
She also sits perfectly in the wider universe of yellow cartoon characters, because Springfield does not believe in subtle color design.
Susie Carmichael – Rugrats

From: Rugrats
Hair vibe: Braided, textured, and often discussed as curls or dreadlock-inspired styling.
My take: Susie’s hair and outfits made her feel bright, confident, and instantly different from the rest of the Rugrats world.
Susie Carmichael is a prominent female cartoon character with textured hair, and I always remember how much personality her design had.
Some viewers describe her hairstyle as curly, while others point out that it reads closer to a dreadlock hairstyle.
Either way, her hair is central to her look.
Susie often wears her hair with ties and flower details, giving her a playful, colorful style that matches her confident personality.
She also has one of the best contrasts with Angelica. Their singing face-off energy is exactly the kind of cartoon drama I support. If you’re revisiting Rugrats characters, Angelica Pickles is a whole situation too.
Moana

From: Moana
Hair vibe: Long, flowing curly black hair built for ocean wind and heroic decision-making.
My take: Moana’s curls look like they have survived saltwater, destiny, and several bad plans from Maui.
Moana of Motunui has one of my favorite curly-haired Disney designs because her hair feels alive in the animation.
It moves naturally, reacts to the environment, and fits her ocean-centered story beautifully.
Her long curly black hair is not overly polished or stiff. It feels practical, textured, and connected to who she is.
Moana’s curls support her character identity. She’s brave, curious, stubborn, compassionate, and ready to sail directly into problems if destiny asks nicely.
Or even if it doesn’t.
Ms. Frizzle – The Magic School Bus
From: The Magic School Bus
Hair vibe: Frizzy red curls with “science teacher who may ignore safety laws” energy.
My take: Ms. Frizzle’s hair is exactly what I expect from someone who drives a bus through the human body.
Ms. Frizzle has the kind of curly red hair that says, “Today’s lesson will be fun, educational, and probably illegal in three states.”
Her frizzy curls, themed dresses, glowing earrings, and endless field-trip confidence make her one of the most iconic teachers in animation.
And the hair is part of the whole package.
Ms. Frizzle’s curls match her energy perfectly. They’re bright, expressive, unpredictable, and just chaotic enough to suggest the bus may turn into a spaceship before lunch.
Honestly, where does she get her clothes? Keesha was right to ask.
Merida of DunBroch – Brave

From: Brave
Hair vibe: Big, wild, curly red hair that refuses to be tamed.
My take: Merida’s curls are basically a character of their own, and frankly, they deserve billing.
Merida of DunBroch is probably the most famous example of a female cartoon character with big curly hair.
Her red curls are not just pretty. They are storytelling.
The untamed quality of her hair reflects her personality: independent, stubborn, bold, emotional, and deeply resistant to being shoved into a role she never chose.
Merida’s hair visually reinforces the entire point of Brave. She does not want to be controlled. Her curls don’t either.
Every frame of her hair feels alive, and that movement makes her emotions feel even bigger—anger, joy, frustration, freedom, all of it.
If this list had a crown for animated curls, Merida would probably shoot an arrow through it and keep riding.
Why Curly Hair Works So Well in Animation
I think curly hair works beautifully in cartoons because it gives animators so much personality to play with.
Straight hair can be iconic too, of course. But curls bring shape, movement, bounce, volume, and a little bit of visual chaos.
And I say “visual chaos” with affection. My own hair has staged rebellions.
Why curly-haired cartoon characters stand out:
- Curls create silhouette: big, textured hair makes characters easier to recognize instantly.
- Curls show motion: bounce and volume make movement feel more alive.
- Curls can symbolize personality: freedom, rebellion, creativity, softness, confidence, or nervous energy.
- Curls can reflect identity: for many characters, textured hair connects to culture, family, self-expression, or growth.
That’s why these characters are memorable. The hair is not just decoration.
It helps tell me who they are before they even speak.
Final Thoughts
Female cartoon characters with curly hair have given animation some unforgettable designs.
Merida’s curls scream independence. Mirabel’s curls feel warm and personal. Moana’s hair moves with her world. Ms. Frizzle’s frizz practically teaches the lesson. Ginger’s red curls feel like growing up. Reggie’s purple curls are pure 90s confidence.
For me, the best curly-haired female cartoon characters are the ones whose hair feels connected to the character’s spirit.
Not perfect. Not overly polished. Just expressive, memorable, and full of life.
And honestly, any cartoon curl that survives adventure, middle school, science field trips, ocean wind, and Pixar-level emotional symbolism deserves respect.
Now I’m curious: which female cartoon character with curly hair would you add to the list?