Japanese ink and paint artist who colored 61 episodes of the original Dragon Ball series and contributed to Dragon Ball Z. Her coloring work was essential to the final visual presentation of the franchise's early decades.
Misae Suzuki worked as a colorist on the original Dragon Ball series, handling the ink and paint department's crucial work across 61 episodes spanning from the Emperor Pilaf Saga through the Piccolo Jr. Saga. Her technical precision transformed black-and-white animation art into fully colored frames, a labor-intensive process that required consistency, speed, and artistic sensitivity. Suzuki's color choices helped establish Dragon Ball's distinctive visual identity, from the lush greens and blues of the natural world to the vibrant reds of the Red Ribbon Army.
She contributed to Dragon Ball Z's coloring work and provided paint work for theatrical films including Mystical Adventure and Dead Zone. Her work during this period predated computerized coloring, making her role even more demanding as all color work was applied by hand or cell-painting techniques.
Ink and paint artists like Suzuki represented essential technical expertise that often went uncredited in final production. While animators' names appeared in opening credits, colorists worked behind the scenes to maintain visual quality and consistency. Suzuki's 61 episodes of Dragon Ball coloring represented months of intensive work, translating the black-and-white art into the vivid world viewers experienced on screen. Her contributions exemplified the collaborative nature of anime production, where numerous unseen technical professionals combined their skills to create the finished product.
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