White Brazilian Erotic

Homeland

Brazil

Region

South America

About White Brazilian People

White Brazilians (branca per IBGE classification) comprise approximately 43.4% of the Brazilian population per the 2022 census — about 88 million people. The community traces ancestry primarily to Portuguese colonial settlement (16th-19th c.) and to the very large 19th-20th c. immigration waves: Italian (the largest single immigrant origin, with approximately 5 million descendants concentrated in São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Paraná), German (substantial communities in the South, especially in Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, and Espírito Santo), Spanish, Polish, Ukrainian, Slavic, and Lebanese-Syrian. The population is heavily concentrated in the South (Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Paraná are 70-85% white) and Southeast (São Paulo and Minas Gerais) with smaller proportions in the Northeast and North.

Typical White Brazilian Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Skin tone is predominantly Fitzpatrick II-III, with substantial within-region variance reflecting the diverse European source populations: Northern Italian and German descended communities (especially in the South) skew lighter (I-II), while Portuguese, Southern Italian, and Spanish-descended populations skew III-IV. Hair color spans dark brown, light brown, blonde, and red, with darker shades dominant nationally but blonde and red variants concentrated in German and Slavic-descended families. Hair texture is predominantly straight to wavy (Andre Walker 1A-2B). Eye color is most often brown but with substantially higher frequencies of hazel, green, and blue variants than the broader Brazilian population — particularly in Southern and Italian-Brazilian communities. Facial features track Iberian (Portuguese, Spanish), Italic, Germanic, and Slavic European source populations. Build is on average taller than the broader Brazilian average, reflecting both genetic ancestry and stronger historical nutritional access.

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