A sample prompt of what you can find in this page
Prompt by Aiverser

and water Ideogram prompts

very few results

6 months ago

"Create a meticulously staged cinematic scene with rigid symmetry and frontal, low-angle framing, emphasizing a diagonal composition (45-degree tilt) where all elements align along a single dynamic axis. Color Grading: 60% Dominant: Soft, powdery pastel pinks (Pantone 12-1109 TPX "Marshmallow") saturating the sky, snow, and TV casing. 30% Secondary: Frosted teal blues (HEX #6ECEDA) in the glacial lake, aurora, and TV screen static. 10% Accent: Mustard-yellow (Pantone 15-0950 TPX "Golden Glow") in the aurora streaks, wool tufts, and corroded metal knobs. TV Design: A 1950s Bakelite TV (matte eggshell plastic with hairline cracks) tilted diagonally (top-left corner at 10 o’clock, bottom-right submerged at 4 o’clock). Crack: A jagged diagonal fissure (2cm wide) splits the screen from top-left to bottom-right, leaking viscous, neon-bright color bar pigment (RGB values: pink #FF9EB5, teal #5FDAC3, gold #FFD700) that pools into the water below. Materials: Body: Faux-weathered plastic with chipped edges revealing rusted steel underlayers. Details: Three rotary knobs (tarnished brass, 4cm diameter) labeled "VOL," "TUNE," "POWER." Cables: Braided wool cords (undyed cream yarn, 3cm thickness) coiled around the TV’s base, fraying at the ends. Screen Imagery: Static Overlay: A 1953 RCA-style color bar test pattern (8 vertical bands) glitching every 2 seconds, causing the teal and pink bars to "melt" downward into liquid with the word "Prompthero" barely visible on it. Underlying Image: A faint, glowing topographical map (golden-yellow lines on indigo) dissolves into water that cascades from the screen’s crack, merging with the glacial lake. Environment: Glacial Lake: Semi-frozen water (translucent teal, 70% opacity) with jagged ice shards (20cm height) encircling the TV. Snowfall: Heavy, dense snowflakes (1cm diameter) falling at 45 degrees, accumulating on the TV’s top-left corner. Aurora Borealis: Three parallel bands (pink #FFB3D1, teal #7FE5E5, gold #FFE44D) in smooth sine waves, 15° tilt, 80% opacity. Sky: Ultra-high-contrast starfield (ISO 51200 noise pattern) with 2,000 visible stars (randomized 2-4px white dots). Lighting & Effects: Key Light: A frontal, low-orange sodium vapor lamp (3200K) casting sharp diagonal shadows (20° angle) from the TV onto the ice. Bloom: Halation around the aurora and screen, radius 15px, intensity 70%. Textures: Film Grain: 35mm Kodak Vision3 250D overlay (gritty, high-detail). Lens Defects: Two hairline scratches (1px width) at 15° and 75° angles, plus hexagonal lens flare (60% opacity) from the aurora. Physics & Motion: Water: Viscous fluid dynamics—the leaking color bars swirl in 5cm eddies, blending with the glacial lake. Wool: Submerged yarn floats upward in 10cm tufts, swaying at 0.5Hz frequency. Result: A hyper-detailed, reference-free scene that implicitly channels Wes Anderson’s aesthetic through obsessive symmetry, retro-kitsch materials, and a strict 60/30/10 pastel hierarchy—no director named, all style embedded in granular technical specs.

2 hours ago

Psychedelic, surreal, psychedelic. photographic. Code Cracked: The Tantaria Principle For centuries, the question has haunted us: How did ancient civilizations achieve the impossible? How were the pyramids raised, Stonehenge arranged, the Nazca lines drawn? We have searched for complex machinery, alien intervention, or technologies lost to time. But the answer was never a "what". It was a "how". The Tantaria Principle reveals that the ancients did not build their wonders; they grew them. * They possessed a foundational understanding we have forgotten: the highest form of creation is a collaboration with the world, not a conquest of it. They understood the language of their environment—the grain of stone, the flow of water, the pressure of a root, the path of the stars. They did not force nature into submission; they invited it into partnership. They used water to lubricate and move stone, they used growing root systems to fuse masonry, they aligned their structures with celestial forces they revered. What we dismissed as "magic" was, in fact, a deeper magic: the magic of profound understanding, patience, and symbiosis. The greatest secret of the ancients was not a lost tool. It was a lost mindset. The mystery of "how they did it" is solved the moment we realize they were not trying to conquer their environment. They were conversing with it. Signature: Richard Worthington + AI | Creative Alliance--ar 16:9 --v 6. 0-- masterpiece, ultra-detailed, 8k, ethereal glow, god rays, ancient megaliths, serene, majestic, fantasy art. In the style of the Dutch Masters.