1930's Rubberhose Style
Anima LoRA
·
Uploaded Jun 20, 2026
·
Used 14 times
deaTstSX3mJYHs2b
7yR8G8gQyyPpXVjE
Trigger words
Description

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

  • Works best for character illustrations , portraits, and scene compositions with a vintage cartoon feel

  • Pairs well with prompts referencing jazz, speakeasies, vaudeville, dancing, or early Americana to lean into the period atmosphere

  • Lower CFG scales (5–7) tend to keep the rubbery, loose quality intact

  • 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.

Related Posts