Ring Around the Collar: Difference between revisions

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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.RingAroundTheCollar 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.RingAroundTheCollar, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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{{trope}}
[[File:yogi.jpg|link=Yogi Bear (Animation)|right|He's [[Half -Dressed Cartoon Animal|not wearing pants]], either.]]
 
 
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The advent of digital animation has rendered this a largely [[Discredited Trope]], used mostly as a tribute to the classics - although, the equivalent is still utilised in 3D animation for digital games - characters are built out of multiple, non-connected models, with things like collars, watches, and the like, being used to hide the seams, akin to traditional 2D.
{{examples|Examples:}}
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
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* In the 1970's Hanna-Barbera adaptation of ''[[Tom and Jerry (Animation)|Tom and Jerry]]'', Jerry was fitted with a bow-tie.
* ''[[The Simpsons]]'' family are all designed like this. ''Pearls on a little girl?'' That's why. In an episode where Lisa loses them, she breaks down in tears and admits that without them she's nothing but [[Only Six Faces|a big Maggie]].
* Cool Cat, the last new starring character of the original ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' shorts, wore a necktie, which was bound to make people mistake him for a [[Hanna -Barbera]] character.
** Speaking of ''[[Looney Tunes]]'', this is averted with Daffy Duck, whose distinctive white collar is based on the ring stripe found on many actual ducks (though given the white ring on black feathers, it ''does'' resemble the collar found on most clergymen, particularly deacons and reverends).
* In [[Dragon Tales]], all of the dragon characters (of both genders) wear a ribbon with a pendant around their neck.