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oversized lips

I'm practicing more and more with the new FLUX model and something bothers me: I find that the faces of "random" girls are still very stereotypical like in fashion magazines, especially when it comes to lips which are always oversized. It looks like the girls have had botox injections for ten years.

I tried with prompts containing terms like "random girl, thin lips",, and in the negative "oversized lips, botox, surgery, implants, silicon, fake", but nothing works, I always get a clone of "emily ratajkowski".

Has anyone ever managed to make a generation with these thin lips like Kirsten Dunst's?

By the way, does anyone know why every generation, even without style, always adds "natural beauty" in the prompt? I think it distorts the action.

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FIXED - political prompt working again
  • It's curious. Some people work, like Taylor Swift, and others don't, like Natalie Portman. Is it a matter of training the database? Do we just have to keep training it? Or will we always miss certain personalities?

  • Please Bring Back the Old Model — Let Us Choose
  • ok but I don't understand, according to the following link, it is explained that prettyAi already uses several models: "As for now, we know that Perchance is using different models depending on the prompt of the user (specifically 'Furry', 'Photorealistic', and 'Anime' images)" https://rentry.org/perchance-ai-faq#%3A~%3Atext=*+The+`text%2Cspecifically+'Furry'%2C+'Photorealistic So, what to understand?

  • Lighting in photography styles
  • Same thing. I feel like the new model is trying to produce images of a certain style, with a predefined lighting style, and also predefined faces. It's hard to really have control over it and make it produce what you want. In any case, more difficult than with the old one. Maybe it needs more training. Yes, but then, how can we help it manage its "fine tuning"?

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BE
    BenFligans @lemmy.world
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