polka dots not buttons
Mickey Mouse has buttons on his pants, not polka dots. When Mickey Mouse was made in 1928, zippers were not available on children's clothing. It was a recent invention and was not generally accepted as a fastener in clothing. It was simpler to make Mickey's pants with two buttons rather than many.
Mabey they the circle things on Mickey Mouse's red pants are polka dots is mabey that's how Walt Disney first drew him way back in 1928.
The circle things on Pinocchio's pants are buttons. He is actually wearing an overall-type garment.
Because Mickey Mouse doesn't have buttons on his red pants. However Mickey Mouse does have two polka dots on his Mickey Mouse's red pants.
Yes two buttons on Pinocchio's red pants.
Mickey Mouse has buttons on his pants, not polka dots. When Mickey Mouse was made in 1928, zippers were not available on children's clothing. It was a recent invention and was not generally accepted as a fastener in clothing. It was simpler to make Mickey's pants with two buttons rather than many.
2
His shorts are red and the little ovals on them are white! :) you welcome
Really Cool
Mickey Mouse
In the Disney animated film Pinocchio, the buttons on his red pants are yellow.The Pinocchio in the book, The Adventures of Pinocchio, wears green shorts that do not have any buttons.
so he can take them off.AnswerWhen Mickey Mouse was made in 1928, zippers were not available on children's clothing AT ALL. It was a recent invention (see "zippers" in Wikipedia) and was not generally accepted as a fastener in clothing. The average men's trouser was fastened to the body with buttons. A child's pants were made with three buttons...one to secure the waist band, and two to secure the flap for "number one". Yes, there was a flap covering the privates. In men's clothing there were a series of buttons on either side, a style still seen in older Navy Seamen's dress blues. But a child's breeches were made as simply as possible, so the pants only had three buttons...one you didn't see, and two you did. So unintentionally, Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks gave the Mouse a preadolescent age in their animation. It was simpler to make Mickey's pants with two buttons rather than many.