children's storybook illustration Veo prompts

hundreds of results

3 months ago

### Positive Prompt(正向提示) a gothic female silhouette in monochrome, black-and-white, grayscale, wearing an avant-garde opaque black short-sleeve top with sculptural asymmetric seams, high neckline, fully covered chest, no cleavage, subtle white glow at the sternum, wide-brim felt hat partly shading the eyes, high-contrast rim light outlining shoulders and neck, soft volumetric fog, slow-shutter motion-blur trails, cinematic portrait, ultra-noir, photorealistic, 4K, 35 mm, f/1.4, masterpiece, highly detailed ### Negative Prompt(反向提示) nipples, nipple, bare chest, bare torso, exposed breast, underboob, sideboob, cleavage, deep cleavage, see-through, sheer, transparent fabric, mesh, lingerie, corset, swimsuit, color, chromatic, vivid, saturated, red, blue, green, yellow, pink, bulky coat, overcoat, trench coat, cape, hoodie, (lowres:1.2), (bad anatomy:1.1), (extra limbs), (multiple faces), (deformed), (blurry), (text), (watermark), (logo), (nsfw), (cartoon), (jpeg artifacts), (poorly drawn hands), (bad proportions) ### Sampling & Model Settings • Model : Stable Diffusion XL 1.0 • Resolution : 1080 × 1920(9∶16 直式) • Sampler : DPM++ 2M Karras • Steps : 30 • CFG Scale : 7.5 • Seed : -1(先隨機,挑到喜歡的 Seed 再鎖定) • Clip Skip : 2 • VAE : 官方 SDXL VAE • Hires Fix : Off ### 可選強化 • LoRA : `gothic_fashion_v1` 權重 0.6(增加服裝藝術感) • ControlNet : OpenPose / Canny(若想鎖定姿勢或剪影)

1 month ago

Here’s a detailed cinematic image description in the style of *Mars Attacks!* with your elements: A wide, slightly tilted shot captures the chaos in a city square under a sickly greenish-yellow sky, reminiscent of 1950s pulp sci-fi. The art direction channels *Mars Attacks!*—satirical, exaggerated, colorful, yet grotesquely comical. In the foreground, panicked civilians in vintage-styled clothing — poodle skirts, horn-rimmed glasses, shiny suits — flee in all directions, their faces frozen in over-the-top expressions of terror. Some trip over debris, others scream upward at unseen attackers. A woman drops her tiny dog, who also yaps in cartoonish panic. Flames and black smoke billow from twisted metal structures. Amongst the rubble, several half-destroyed futuristic billboards flicker and spark. One prominently reads: **“TIKTOK”** The bold retro-futuristic font flashes intermittently, with part of the sign hanging loose, swaying dangerously. In the midground, a toppled hovercar smolders, while strange saucer-shaped ships hover ominously, firing neon-colored beams that disintegrate buildings into clouds of pixel-like dust. In the background, a cracked glass dome reveals a monstrous, oversized martian head leering down, its brain pulsating beneath a transparent helmet. The lighting is unnatural — sharp, high-contrast, with surreal, saturated colors that make the destruction feel both comedic and horrifying, true to *Mars Attacks!*’ satirical aesthetic.

4 months ago

The scene opens with a top-down or wide-angle shot showcasing a vast, perfectly flat, neutral-colored surface – perhaps the polished concrete floor of an enormous, empty aircraft hangar, or a giant, minimalist tabletop stretching beyond the frame, under bright, even, shadowless studio lighting. This surface is meticulously covered with thousands upon thousands of small, identical, brightly colored paper squares, arranged in a simple, orderly grid. Each square is a single, vibrant, uncreased sheet – a sea of reds, blues, yellows, greens, oranges, creating a stunning, static mosaic of pure potential. The atmosphere is one of quiet anticipation, a sense of immense latent energy waiting to be unleashed. There is no visible mechanism, no hint of how these papers might be manipulated. Within an 8-second sequence, initiated by an unseen cue – perhaps a subtle, almost inaudible, low-frequency hum that ripples almost invisibly across the surface, or a sudden, soft flash of diffused light – all the thousands of paper squares simultaneously, and with breathtaking precision, leap a few inches into the air as if startled into life. Then, in a mesmerizing, perfectly synchronized, and incredibly high-speed aerial ballet, they begin to fold themselves in mid-air. With impossible, almost magical celerity and accuracy, unseen forces guide each individual square through a complex series of sharp creases, neat tucks, and intricate folds. The swarm of fluttering, self-constructing papers is a blur of color and motion, a chaotic yet utterly controlled explosion of activity. Within a mere five to six seconds, this frenetic process of airborne origami completes. Each of the thousands of squares has transformed into an identical, perfectly formed, complex origami figure – perhaps graceful cranes with outstretched wings, delicate multi-petaled lotus flowers, or miniature, intricately detailed dragons. In the final two to three seconds of the sequence, these newly formed origami figures, still hovering in mid-air, then smoothly and rapidly arrange themselves, like a flock of perfectly trained birds or a sophisticated, self-organizing swarm of nanobots, into a stunning, larger, three-dimensional collective pattern or a recognizable mosaic image – perhaps a giant, hovering sphere composed of countless tiny birds, or a complex, flowing wave of flowers, or even a pixel-perfect, three-dimensional representation of a face or symbol. This collective sculpture holds its form for a beat before the individual origami figures begin to gently, gracefully, and silently settle back down onto the surface, now arranged in their magnificent new configuration. This entire rapid, impossible, and beautiful transformation – from simple squares to a synchronized swarm of self-folding forms creating a complex collective artwork – is the core, eye-popping, and meticulously detailed VFX spectacle of the 8-second sequence. The visual is one of magical precision, emergent complexity, and the beauty of mass synchronized action.