This LoRA captures the timeless charm of mid-20th century Disney animation aesthetics.
Warm palettes, bold outlines, stylized character designs, and painterly backgrounds that balance simplicity with elegance.
Note:
The dataset is 100% synthetic and was not trained on copyrighted images. Do not expect character references to work unless the base model you use already knows them.
Description
FAQ
Comments (9)
Awesome style!
I'm going to sound like the biggest dick for asking this but... any reason most of your examples look like they're for old decolored film stock?
Because this is the point of the LoRA :)
@ArsMachina so you intentionally went for a degraded film stock feel... interesting choice.
EDIT. Let me make one thing clear though. I'm not dishing this I'm point out that when this art style was new, the colors weren't so yellowed out. The original Disney movies were photographed one cell at a time on cellulose film. And that degraded over time. The original movies wouldn't have had this color tone, though most actual film canisters you could get your hands on today do or are even worse. Cellulose film degrades over time. But no movie from the golden age of animation was discolored or had a yellow tint to it when it actually released in the theaters.
@alucardnoir941 Though you present yourself as an authority, you have also failed to note that they wouldn't have been crisp white. As a trained artist and someone who has a number of colleagues and acquaintances who have worked in animation, I can tell you that with high-end animation like this LoRA's focus, you would generally go for results like this LoRA tends to give. You would not put a lot of crisp white, generally speaking, into something any more than you would put total solid black on an animated feature, because they are most useful to punctuate. You can even notice in the example of, say, The Black Cauldron key illustrations or frames, closer to pure white is only used for magical effects. The entire rest of the film has what in live-action films would be achieved by coloured lighting...because stark white light for film of any kind usually looks absolutely awful. So this doesn't look anything like what decolouring from age would, and in fact even the cinematic presentation was essentially this LoRA's results.
@hushicho Firstly, I never claimed they'd be crisp white - a certain scene from American Psycho comes to mind though. As for you trained artist excuse for the LORA, I'm going to have to call BS on that. These clearly looked like degraded film stock and not first to cinema film prints. If you can't actually see the aged yellowing in them I'm sorry but I will have to call you out on your self professed artist credentials.
Dude.. Can you read? It says right there that it's a lora for a mid-20th century animation style! :)
@evilblade I can... you apparently can not. I never said it wasn't, I claimed it had the artificial yellowing of old film stock. 20th century disney art style, and mid 20th century degraded film stock look are not synonymous.
@qulick because "you do better" is such a valid counter argument...






