Woman is not edited in this image prompts

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4 months ago

Create an image for me that fits DIN A4. A beautiful woman with an african background. It should be a portrait in black and white – creative – surreal – abstract – with a reference to migration. Feel free to play with motion blur (but not too much – perhaps a subtle motion blur). The motif should be darker. The background should be light. Magazine editorial style. And please only the person. No other motifs. (The portrait will later be edited with a coloured background and text will be added – but I will do that myself). In photography, there are various rules and techniques for improving image composition, including the rule that people in the image should not look out of the frame. This is often considered part of image composition, as it is intended to draw the viewer's attention to the most important elements in the image. If a person is looking at the edge of the image, this can often create a feeling of incompleteness and distract the viewer from the main focus. A common practice is to position the person so that they are looking into the image rather than out of it. This creates a connection between the subject and the viewer and can enhance the emotional impact of the image. For example, if a person is looking to the left, the focus of the image should be on leaving enough space on the right side of the image to show the movement of the gaze. This technique goes hand in hand with other photographic rules, such as the rule of thirds or the golden ratio, which serve to harmonise the composition and increase visual interest. Only the person! No animals! No motion blur in the face!

8 months ago

(Primary Subject: Woman, 3D-Printed in Realistic Modern Printer, 1.7 weight) — inside a dim, cluttered bedroom illuminated by the soft, flickering glow of LED strip lights and the rhythmic hum of a modern consumer-grade 3D printer, a surreal scene unfolds. A half-assembled woman is being slowly 3D-printed, layer by layer, inside the printer’s transparent enclosure—her form emerging from glowing PLA-like filament in smooth, hyper-detailed strokes (hyper-realistic printing detail, smooth skin texture, 1.6 weight). Her upper body—torso, arms, and part of her face—is almost complete, formed from semi-translucent material that glows faintly in the ambient light. Thin wisps of support scaffolding cling to her like cyber-organic scaffolds. Her lower half remains unformed, an unfinished spiral of molten filament still being printed as the nozzle moves with quiet precision (realistic filament printing, printer detail, suspended form, 1.5 weight). Seated nearby, a man in casual clothes sits cross-legged on the floor, bathed in warm, ambient screen light. He holds a crumpled instruction manual in one hand—clearly pulled from the open cardboard box lying beside him on the floor, its packaging marked with surreal branding: “SYNTH-CRAFT V2 | HOMEBODY EDITION” (instructional design realism, subtle surreal packaging, 1.4 weight). Loose tools, empty filament spools, soda cans, and old PC parts are scattered around the room, grounding the scene in everyday reality. Behind him, the room glows with scattered LED lighting in hues of electric blue, soft magenta, and warm amber, reflecting off his glasses and casting moody highlights onto the surrounding walls. Dust particles drift in the air, caught in the glow of the printer’s chamber, creating an eerie yet beautiful halo around the forming woman (cinematic atmosphere, volumetric light, dusty haze, 1.4 weight). Rendered with cinematic realism: soft film grain, subtle lens blur, realistic plastic sheen, and dramatic shallow depth-of-field—captured as if shot with a Leica Summilux lens. The entire image is grounded in the plausible, but steeped in a surreal undertone that suggests something far stranger is unfolding (photographic detail, cinematic framing, narrative tension, 1.3 weight). This is not just a print job—it’s manufactured intimacy, wrapped in plastic and instruction sheets.