Such interesting comments on yesterday's post!
When you post images in Midjourney, everyone can see your work and you can see the images created by all the other people online at the same time. In addition, you can see the prompts they use. A lot of the vocabulary I use to create images comes from exposure to words that, in the beginning, may never have occurred to me. A lot of the young users come from the video game world, and they recreate characters in their games. These are names I’m not familiar with, but I'm learning. Actually, I prefer to use historical characters (like armored medieval knights and Viking warriors), but for this image I created a fantasy. My prompts were: “Female cyborg riding a galloping chrome horse, chrome visor on rider’s face, fully mechanical, highly reflective chrome, hair flying, dramatic cape windblown, cinematic lighting, plain background, exaggerated action, photo realistic, hyper detailed, super sharp, 8k –ar 3:2”. Midjourney gives you four variations. You may like all of them, only one or two of the images, or none of them. You then have the option of ‘upscaling’ (increasing the resolution) for any of the variations and/or asking for four more interpretations of your word commands. FYI, a cyborg is a fictional human with extended physical abilities due to various mechanical implants and enhancements.
Tomorrow I'll post an image in which I used one of my photographs as a background behind the AI image.
My new AI course can be found described here: https://www.jimzuckerman.com/online-ai-training
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