Because of the semantic overlap, referencing any artist named Jean in a stable diffusion prompt tends to add gratuitous denim to the image. Every once in a while the results are funny enough to be worth keeping and improving on.
seen from Türkiye
seen from Yemen

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Germany
seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom

seen from India

seen from India
seen from Maldives
seen from United Kingdom

seen from India
seen from Spain
seen from Maldives
seen from France
seen from Germany
Because of the semantic overlap, referencing any artist named Jean in a stable diffusion prompt tends to add gratuitous denim to the image. Every once in a while the results are funny enough to be worth keeping and improving on.
Another old one I started in like 2022 finished. I like how you can definitely tell from the compositions that these older images were made with much more primitive tech, even if I've polished up the details with a newer model.
Decided to take a brief break from Blender projects and finish up a few of my in-progress 2D AI images. This one was just a semi-randomized recombination of prompt fragments that turned out particularly interestingly, upscaled and with all details meticulously refined as usual.
Found this interesting character while wandering through latent image space and decided to polish up the image a bit.
Just spent the last several hours meticulously refining details on this one. I'm tempted to keep going, but I should probably avoid following that impulse on these randomly generated images that have no greater purpose.
Here's a little preview of a project I'm working on in IntraPaint, this is maybe 10% of the full image. For once I decided to actually pick up a pen and use an ink on paper sketch as the starting point. The rest of it was my usual process of controlled AI inpainting mixed with manual edits.