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• from has had several dozen different costumes throughout the years; artist George Perez was particularly fond of designing new outfits for her. To give some idea of just how frequent this was, during the Terminus Factor storyline Jan is wearing totally different costumes in parts 4 and 5 — apparently she took the time to change on the quinjet in between! • The is almost as bad. • You never see any of the kids from wearing the same outfit twice. This is especially ridiculous considering that they're supposed to be runaways with limited resources. Granted, most of them came from wealthy families, but none of them seemed to be carrying more than a single backpack when they went on the run. • While never explicitly called out, from the has had more costumes than any other member.
It got particularly bad in the second half of the X-Treme X-Men series, where she had on a different costume in nearly every story arc. • Plus the X-Men teams in general have had far more costume changes over the years than typical superheroes. • The are also changing their uniforms all the time. But since they're always variations on the same basic theme of blue bodysuits with the team logo on the chest, they tend to all run together. • may be an archetypical example of but in various adaptations, he's got other outfits ranging from to to even costumes fitted for his allies,.
Who knew 's logo looked pretty good on Batman's suit? • 's Betty and Veronica are classic examples of this trope. It's also one of the rare instances when the Unlimited Wardrobe is for both girls. Veronica obviously has the money to buy whatever clothes she wants.and as for Betty, in some stories she's developed an impressive wardrobe of her own because Veronica just hands off any clothes she gets tired of to Betty.
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Not that Betty necessarily minds, since Veronica's generosity allows her to keep up with Ronnie in fashion despite her much more limited finances. • has had so many outfits, that Veronica from Archie's once celebrated finally owning more outfits (although Katy still modeled far more).
• Tony Stark updates the design of his basic armor every ten or so years. This is done by the artists to prevent. Stark is also shown on more than one occasion to have hundreds of purpose-built armors, stored in a gigantic cellar.
In recent years he seems to update the design far more often, likely to explain away times artists draw the armor wrong due to the increasingly complex designs being difficult to be repeated perfectly across comics. • has a new design pretty much every time he shows up. Given that he has a nigh-unlimited number of bodies and he's constantly changing or upgrading them, this is quite sensible.
•: How many costumes has he gone through?! It's downplayed in that his costume changes are always very temporary. As is, he has had as many costumes as. Also if you count the Venom Symbiote as a costume. • In contrast to her game version Amy in has numerous articles of clothing, apparently changing them every arc (including one-shots).
She's worn eye-liner on one occasion, and has even sported a Gothic Lolita look in the. • has several outfits worn by the models. • The mysterious, heroic senator who first appears in. He changes his color scheme every time he appears.
This highlights his rather eccentric personality in contrast to the other senators and conceals his true identity from the reader. In general, the titular robots tend to change bodies every few years. Megatron is especially guilty of this.
• Miss America Chavez in Kieron Gillen's run of is seen sporting at least five different outfits based around the stars and stripes theme. According to, America does not identify as a superhero and prefers doing her hero-ing on the street level, thus her street clothes. (They also wanted to show off Jamie McKelvie's costume designs.) Unofortunately, the first outfit she used (which is the most iconic) has become a sort of uniform as Ms. America has been seen wearing it in all of her appearaces after Young Avengers ended. • As with the cartoon, fits. The series is based on made to promote fashion dolls after all.
The characters are always changing outfits and, unlike the source, change hairstyles and makeup. Pizzazz, for example, starts the series with a but wears her hair down when dressed casually.
Between the start of issue 6 and the end she buzzed the remainder of her hair off. In the next issue her mohawk is back. • started out as a to, so obviously this trope was in action. Prior to the the characters had an ever-revolving closet door. • Many of female leads will inevitably have a huge number of outfits for them to wear, but only some of them end up in their debut films. The franchise only increased the amount of outfits the characters wear in extended media. • Anya in doesn't have a different dress for every scene she's in, but she does go through far more costume changes than the average animated heroine (in order, she has a tattered peasant dress, a yellow ball gown in a dream sequence, a plain blue dress, a pair of blue pajamas, a purple flapper-esque dress, a blue dress similar to the purple flapper getup, yet another 20s-style dress [these last three all show up within the same musical number], a tight-fitting purple evening gown with, a pair of midriff-baring pink pajamas, and finally a cream-yellow court dress).
Most animated films give their female leads two, maybe three outfits at most! • Nobility in changes outfits three times a day at the very least and get an entirely new wardrobe every season (of which there are a lot), much to the confusion of the Whistler family, who consider this a waste of money.
• In, the members of the Pretty Committee change outfits all the time. This only accentuated by the fact that every outfit is described in brand name-filled paragraphs. • In series, Claudia is, in every single book, said to never wear the same outfit twice. She goes out of her way to do this; never in the history of the books has she worn an exact outfit more than once, even if it means just using a different pair of earrings. Then again, she was a lady-in-waiting of Empress Sadako, and she was very fussy about following (or even setting) court fashion. • Her rival writer diary contains detailed descriptions of court costumes and the in her is often cut by translators though fully justified by the conventions and customs of her age. • can create clothing with a thought, though some have more skill than others.
Selah, an 18th century housewife, describes it as her reward for spending her life sewing. • Molly Metcalf from the series has a magical version of this. She can conjure up any outfit she likes with just a thought.
• The Cat in wore a different outfit every episode. Cara Install Windows 8 Memakai Flashdisk. Not initially a full example, since it's an explicit part of his character - in 'Future Echoes', faced with a choice between death or trimming his wardrobe down to only two suits, he declares that 'Two suits is dead!'
, and considers cutting off his leg to give him room for a third - but it slips into how-does-he-do-that territory in season six, when the ship unexpectedly disappears, leaving the crew with just one shuttlecraft and its contents. (On the other hand, season six also contains the only episode in which the Cat is seen to repeat an outfit, setting up a joke in which the return of a killer android from the episode in which he previously wore the outfit leaves him less concerned about imminent death than about the damage his reputation will take if it gets out that he's worn the same outfit twice.) Naturally, in the 'Better Than Life' episode, one of his fantasies catered for by the virtual reality simulation involves his wardrobe - it's so big that it crosses an international timezone. • According to the DVD commentary, it has happened at least once behind the scenes. One outfit the Cat wore was a black and white striped outfit.
The designers, needing a new outfit, took the clothes and proceeded to use a felt tip marker to colour the white stripes yellow. •: • In contrast to the decidedly limited wardrobe of the Doctor, most of his companions wore different outfits in each serial.
In the 2000s series, Rose Tyler is often seen coming home from time-travelling with a basket full of laundry for her mother to do. • The new series has shown the TARDIS to contain an extremely large wardrobe from which the Doctor picks his outfits, and the Tenth Doctor has occasionally been seen to trade in his brown suit for a blue one, or to don a tuxedo. • The Third Doctor, being very fashion-conscious as a character trait, had lots and lots of outfits. He tended to wear velvet smoking jackets and frilly shirts but all bets were off in terms of colour scheme. • The Fourth Doctor tended to swap parts of his outfit about depending on setting and mood but maintained the same color scheme (browns, greys, burgandy, bright reds and the occasional dash of purple or grass green) and a characteristic long scarf (except for 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang' where he wore a cape instead).
He maintained most of the same general dress sense, with the exception of his first outfit which is noticeably more contemporary to the 1970s than the early-Victorian style he adopts from 'Pyramids of Mars' onward, having been designed for. Several outfits intended as one-shot costumes for reasons ended up getting recycled into his general wardrobe - his distinctive shirt from 'The Deadly Assassin' is used as a normal shirt in 'Invasion of Time' and his waistcoat from 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang' shows up in some S16 and S17 stories. He tends to switch out footwear a lot in particular. Other Fourth Doctor stories show in passing a large number of inner rooms of the TARDIS, including an extremely large room the Doctor refers to as his 'boot cupboard'. • Individual Doctors tend to settle either on or variations on a theme. He also seems to keep around clothes that his companions leave behind; in one serial Sarah Jane finds a dress, and the Doctor comments that it belonged to Victoria, meaning he's probably hung onto it for decades at least.
Despite this, he's still had to steal his clothes from hospital locker rooms on. • Romana () changed outfits every episode, it stood out more than for most companions since her outfits were highly memorable, ranging from white furs, a pink and white version of the Fourth Doctor's costume, fox hunting gear, an Edwardian bathing suit and what Nev Fountain described as his grandfather's gamekeepers outfit to name just a few. • Martha Jones wore the same outfit for her first 6 episodes, although they did take place straight after each other and since it was supposed to be 'just one trip', she hadn't bought a change of clothes. After she and the Doctor returned to Earth, she presumably picked up more clothes since her outfits started changing. • In the fourth series of the New Dr. Who, Donna bought a number of suitcases with her when she joined the Doctor in the TARDIS, including a hat box, and thus has a different outfit every episode.
• Whereas in the Classic series, Sarah Jane Smith often had multiple costume changes in several serials. Usually these changes were for no apparent reason including one time in 'Genesis of the Daleks', where Sarah found a change of clothes in a cupboard full of explosives. This was due to a mistake by the production team - the serial after that one had already been filmed with that costume, and it was only when they were filming Genesis that they realised Sarah didn't have a chance to get back to the TARDIS in between (having been forced onto that mission by the Time Lords), so they had to a way for her to change clothes. • Other classic series companions who had a new costume in every story or so included Zoe, Jo, Romana (both incarnations), and Peri.
• Amy Pond does occasionally reuse jackets and her long red scarf, but for the most part she has a pretty varied wardrobe. Though it is logical that she brought a decent amount of clothes with her, since she'd been waiting for him to return since she was 10 years old and would probably be. • River Song, so far, has worn a different outfit every time her personal timeline intersected with the Doctor's. As of the end of season 5, we've had a white spacesuit, two different black dresses, a skin-tight black pant suit, white overalls, and a Cleopatra disguise. • The Twelfth Doctor's outfit has an unusually large amount of variation considering how minimalist it is, much more than his predecessors.
He sticks exclusively with dark blue, black and white with a red lining to his coat, but we've had all kinds of shirts, a jumper with holes in, various waistcoats, a warehouse coat, a cardigan (when criticised for this in an interview, he replied 'Tom Baker wore a cardigan!' ) and formalwear resembling what the Third Doctor wore in 'Spearhead from Space'.
• The seemed to have new wardrobe (and always plenty of money) every week, despite only ever taking one change of clothes through the wormholes between worlds. There were occasional attempts to (alternate versions of the sliders have the same ATM PIN), but it still strained to have every cast member show up with a whole new ensemble each week, especially since this would happen even with episodes that were set immediately after each other, leading one online fan to ask the question 'what really goes on in that wormhole??' •: Most of the noble ladies of the show have an ever changing wardrobe, with Margaery's being the most prominent example (to the point that, when stopping to help the poor for PR purposes, she ironically doesn't even bother to protect her expensive dress from dragging through the mud because she has so many others). • While all of the other castaways in had to make do with a or a few token outfits, the Howells dressed as though they had a bottomless clothes chest. One has to wonder just what they were doing taking all that clothing on what was ostensibly a three hour tour. (Not only did they have several outfits each, but they had costumes, wigs, enough fabric to make long door curtains, and large bundles of cash in varying denominations.) Additionally, the castaways as a whole even had enough spare clothing amongst them to sew together to make a theater curtain.
• The Howells brought so many clothes with them on the Minnow because they were rich bastards twits who were incapable of tolerating limited means, ever. In the unaired pilot you can see Gilligan struggling to carry several of their suitcases on board. • Ginger also into this in the later seasons; at first she's seen wearing an outfit made from canvas (or something) with 'SS Minnow' stenciled on it. • When you take into account all the people and stuff that tends to wash up on that island (how far can it actually be from the shipping lanes), a crate full of women's evening gowns doesn't seem that unlikely.
Asio Driver Pioneer Ddj Ergo V. • The characters on were famous for this. • In fact, the costume department took it upon themselves to ensure that no character ever appeared in the same outfit twice. It became easier in later series, when they started being sent lots of freebies. • The cast and crew of.