For conceptualization purposes, I find generative AI acceptable instead of passing it off as a finished work of art. As such, I came up with a few conceptual ideas for if some rubber mask disguises from cartoons were turned into actual latex or silicone masks!
The Supreme Cat's rat disguise from "Paying the Piper" (1949). The sound effects, along with the bouncy chest pound earlier when he talks like a stereotypical Native American at one point, imply his rat suit is made of some kind of rubber.
I think a Pepe Le Pew Halloween mask like this would be fun to have. Surprised Illusive Concepts didn't make one when they produced a line of latex Looney Tunes masks 30 years ago.
The ACME Rooster Head Bugs Bunny wore in "Operation: RABBIT" (1952) if it existed in real life.
Sylvester's goat mask from "Fowl Weather" (1953) in real life. While the mask in the cartoon had the eyes molded onto the mask in rubber (yet still move and blink like real eyes when worn in the usual cartoon fashion), for this I felt using the wearer's actual eyes would make more sense.
A rubbery mask of Pete, in his classic design (compared to the Pete masks in the Goof Troop episodes "Buddy Building" and "Peg o' the Jungle" that sport his redesign for that show).
While this wasn't a mask scene in an actual animated cartoon, I was curious to see what a latex Halloween mask of Don Karnage may look like in real life, yes no?
This is a fun idea I had on what a silicone rubber mask of Scooby-Doo may be like, complete with dog collar and nice large neck nape, bearing more than a passing resemblance to the Scooby-Doo mask the Ape Man wore in "Never Ape an Ape Man." In fact, me and a friend tweaked the design some more (to look less like the latex Scooby mask currently made by Rubies/Mask Illusions) and are going to see if a silicone mask maker overseas can actually make it an actual mask for us!