1930's Rubberhose Style
Bring the charm of early animation to life with this LoRA trained on the iconic Rubberhose art style of the 1930s — the era of Fleischer Studios, early Mickey Mouse, and Betty Boop. Characters with fluid, tubular limbs, exaggerated expressions, round silhouettes, and that unmistakable hand-drawn energy of the golden age of cartoons.
Designed for use with Anima , this LoRA captures the full aesthetic package: washed-out, era-appropriate color palettes, heavy film grain, and deep vignetting that makes every image feel like it was pulled straight from a cellulose nitrate reel.
✦ Trigger Words
1930RHS, heavy film grain, vignetting, pale colors, black eyes
Using all triggers together gives the most authentic result.
black eyes
is key to nailing the classic soulless dot-eyes of the era — don't skip it!
✦ Style Notes
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Works best for character illustrations , portraits, and scene compositions with a vintage cartoon feel
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Pairs well with prompts referencing jazz, speakeasies, vaudeville, dancing, or early Americana to lean into the period atmosphere
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Lower CFG scales (5–7) tend to keep the rubbery, loose quality intact
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Try black & white prompts for an even more authentic silent-film look
✦ About the Style
Rubberhose animation gets its name from the way characters' arms and legs were drawn as smooth, boneless tubes — simple to animate, infinitely expressive. Combined with the technical limitations (and happy accidents) of 1930s film reproduction, the result is a look that's simultaneously eerie and endearing — and totally unique in the history of art.