A character that looks strange in the context of their cartoon world. Usually a main character and most likely because this main character was designed before the artist could get into the swing of drawing the rest of the characters. Either that, or it's to set the character apart. Several fit this trope. It's especially noticeable when the characters are from different franchises, showcasing distinctive character designs from their respective source material. A subtrope of this is, where the character deviates from the style specifically for the purpose of looking ugly.

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Compare (when the art itself becomes more cartoonish or viceversa) and (women tend to be drawn more realistically than men in many illustrated works). • A couple of notable instances: • Soaky, a kids' bubble bath marketed in the late 50s and early 60s, was packaged in containers designed as noted cartoon stars. The commercials pairing some of these stars were sometimes bizarre.

Muskie (from ) and is seen on one spot, while and appear in another. The realistic and/or semi-realistic designs of Tracy and Superman contrast quite glaringly against the cartoony Muskie and Tennessee. • The tries time and again to get some Trix cereal from the kids. So in the 80s, who should call him but the one and only. Like a sore thumb. • In, only the two main characters are drawn with the well-recognizable pointy noses.

Any disguises they wear have to include a mask for this reason (and the masks ). • The dinosaurs from are all drawn rather realistically compared to the cartoony artstyle of the comic, at least in later years after the artist had done some research. When they were the focus of a particular strip, and Calvin and Susie when a strip took place in her imagination. • In, Dick and the rest of the police are drawn fairly realistically — but his relatives B.O. Plenty and Gravel Gertie are like Popeye characters. The crooks that Dick pursues are also freakish, but they're supposed to be freakish-looking in-universe.

• in once when Beetle appears in what turns out to be a. Another time, a bunch of characters from other comics appear briefly, drawn as in the originals. • In Priscilla's Pop, Hollyhock has a simpler head and face design unlike the other humans. •: • By the mid 1950s, the characters have became more detailed while Charlie Brown still has the simple design he had from the start.

Trunks

Vyazanie beretov spicami dlya nachinayuschih video for kids. Later, the other characters got simpler designs and this was no longer the case. • Lucy was drawn with much more realistic eyes, however she got the like everyone else later but with marks. • has a few unique twists in comparison to the more general For one, all loopers on Remnant activate in pairs, which is eventually explained as a result of their unique soul anatomy; for another, an early intervention by a hacker led to three nominally villainous individuals looping, alongside a pet dog and two teachers, which circumvented the usual way loopers were activated and had a number of consequences. • has the sorority known as Exceeda Zeta, and its members consist of Laura Sharp note who has a dragon-like appearance coupled with furry legs, Dot Pressler note an orange gelatinous creature, Colette Creouture note a semi-furry, horn-sporting monster, Katy McCrea note who looks like an anthropomorphic fish with a full head of hair, and Monnie Monstre note who has red hair, yellow skin, four arms, and a dinosaur-like tail. They each stand out quite significantly from the other sororities/fraternities at Monsters University in that their designs are far more detailed and vastly different from each other. • Katy and Monnie stand out in particular as they seem to be the only monsters at MU who wear pants.

• Dot is also different from the other blob-like monsters, seeing as how she has a more realistically slim body complete with curves. • LeFou, Maurice, and the appliances as humans are far toonier-looking than the rest of the human cast in. • In the 1939 Max Fleischer film of, Gulliver is drawn in a more realistic manner (thanks to ) than the more cartoony Lilliputians. Except the two love-interest Lilliputians, Prince David and Princess Glory, who are also rotoscoped, wrecking the otherwise nicely stylistic contrast.

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