sixgunzloaded wrote:Viridian wrote:Some nice renders from the Bikini set
Fantastic!
Love their faces! Is it just me, or does it seem like the AI has an easier time rendering expressions (and billowing, messed up hair, too) in comic-style than in photography-style?
Oh this is so tempting, I have a compulsion when people start a sentence with "is in just me" to interject with "yep, it's just you" and that's before they get to the or/but part! Anyway to the main part of the question; here I think the key word is "seem", there are two parts to this:
First, a lot of AI images are done by people trying it out on the free online services and entering prompts of the "girl with big tits sinking in quicksand" level of sophistication.
Second, a lot of the photorealistic models are trained on "red carpet"/PR images from the internet of people looking straight at the camera and smiling inanely.
The net result is lots of generated images of girls with big tits sinking in quicksand while looking at the camera and smiling inanely, which I guess isn't that surprising really.
As I'm sure Viridian would confirm, even for AI "drawings" you don't get good atmospheric images with interesting facial expressions and dramatic hair by using the prompt in "First" above. If you want "Surprised" you have to ask for it "surprised, eyes wide open, brows raised, lips parted", it may not work all the time but sometimes it will, those are the ones you keep. Same with hair, I have a file of 40 hairstyles that my prompts pick from when I generate images (I have to say, it didn't include "billowing" but it does now),they add to the diversity and variety of the images I produce. Nobody has ever said "nice hair", it is taken for granted, but I feel it adds to the mood and atmosphere of the image and, like the facial expressions, gives variety. There is another aspect to the distinction between art and photographic, our minds are much more attuned to divergence in photorealistic images and if things get a bit over exaugurated something in us screams "abomination", whereas we are much more accepting and tolerant of art/drawings etc.