First-person view walking through a dark, abandoned hospital corridor. The camera moves slowly and cautiously, as if the viewer is holding a flashlight. The flashlight beam swings across cracked tiled floors and stained walls, revealing flickering overhead lights and broken hospital signs. The corridor is long and mostly unlit — only one light out of several works, creating pools of dim light between deep shadows. Occasionally, the flashlight catches glimpses of empty doorways, peeling paint, or strange shapes at the end of the hall. The entire scene is tense, quiet, and cinematic, with strong light and shadow contrast. The motion is immersive and steady, evoking suspense.
Replace the empty doorway with a fully installed blower door test setup (blower in Minneapolis 3), matching the exact appearance, scale, and position from the reference image. The blower door must be tightly installed at the front depth of the doorway, aligned with the door jamb and floor threshold — not recessed toward the back of the entry. The frame must cover the full front perimeter of the doorway, and the door lock cylinder must not be visible. Completely seal the entire door frame on all sides with a tight red fabric cover, fully covering the perimeter with no visible gaps. The red fabric should stretch evenly across the top and both vertical sides, forming a proper airtight seal around the frame. Copy the red blower door fabric panel, black frame straps, circular white fan mounted at the bottom center, digital pressure gauge above it, connected cables, and the cable on the floor. The floor cable must extend forward and continue out of the image from the front edge of the frame. Maintain correct proportions, realistic perspective, natural lighting, and accurate shadows so it looks like a professionally installed real blower door test in this doorway. Do not change the surrounding walls, door trim, floor, lighting conditions, or environment. 🚨 VERY IMPORTANT - The frame around the cover must not be visible. The red fabric cover must completely wrap around and conceal the entire frame perimeter on all sides so that no part of the frame is exposed. 🚨 IMPORTANT - The red fabric panel appears slightly convex, bowing inward under external air pressure to visually indicate pressurization from outside. On the Other hand, When the red cover bulges outward, it appears smooth and wrinkle-free. 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not remove or modify the door panel The existing hinged wooden door panel must remain fully visible exactly as in the base image. 🚨 IMPORTANT — The cable on the ground is only one 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not alter architecture or opening widths 🚨 IMPORTANT — The Gauge should not be changed or minimized not alter architecture or opening widths. 🚨 IMPORTANT - Do not forget the handles.
The Red‑Lit Exit — Woman Turning Toward the Unknown Prompt (GPT‑2.0 style): A beautiful woman caught mid‑turn in a fog‑filled underground corridor, framed by a glowing red EXIT doorway. Her jacket swings outward with the motion, and her hair lifts slightly as if something moved past her. The fog thickens toward the far end of the hall, hiding everything except faint outlines of pillars. The red EXIT sign casts a strange glow across her face and the mist around her. The floor is glossy and empty, reflecting the doorway like a distorted mirror. Painterly cinematic realism, cold concrete textures, drifting fog, liminal emptiness, unsettling quiet.
A painting depicting an empty room with white walls and wooden doors, with sunlight streaming through the window onto the floor. The door is slightly open to reveal part of another wall painted in gray color. There is no furniture inside, creating a stark contrast between light and shadow on the grey surface. This scene evokes feelings of solitude or contemplation in the style of Bill Alexander. --ar 7:8 --v 5.2
First-person view walking through a dark, abandoned hospital corridor. The camera moves slowly and cautiously, as if the viewer is holding a flashlight. The flashlight beam swings across cracked tiled floors and stained walls, revealing flickering overhead lights and broken hospital signs. The corridor is long and mostly unlit — only one light out of several works, creating pools of dim light between deep shadows. Occasionally, the flashlight catches glimpses of empty doorways, peeling paint, or strange shapes at the end of the hall. The entire scene is tense, quiet, and cinematic, with strong light and shadow contrast. The motion is immersive and steady, evoking suspense.
Replace the empty doorway with a fully installed blower door test setup (blower in Minneapolis 3), matching the exact appearance, scale, and position from the reference image. The blower door must be tightly installed at the front depth of the doorway, aligned with the door jamb and floor threshold — not recessed toward the back of the entry. The frame must cover the full front perimeter of the doorway, and the door lock cylinder must not be visible. Completely seal the entire door frame on all sides with a tight red fabric cover, fully covering the perimeter with no visible gaps. The red fabric should stretch evenly across the top and both vertical sides, forming a proper airtight seal around the frame. Copy the red blower door fabric panel, black frame straps, circular white fan mounted at the bottom center, digital pressure gauge above it, connected cables, and the cable on the floor. The floor cable must extend forward and continue out of the image from the front edge of the frame. Maintain correct proportions, realistic perspective, natural lighting, and accurate shadows so it looks like a professionally installed real blower door test in this doorway. Do not change the surrounding walls, door trim, floor, lighting conditions, or environment. 🚨 VERY IMPORTANT - The frame around the cover must not be visible. The red fabric cover must completely wrap around and conceal the entire frame perimeter on all sides so that no part of the frame is exposed. 🚨 IMPORTANT - The red fabric panel appears slightly convex, bowing inward under external air pressure to visually indicate pressurization from outside. On the Other hand, When the red cover bulges outward, it appears smooth and wrinkle-free. 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not remove or modify the door panel The existing hinged wooden door panel must remain fully visible exactly as in the base image. 🚨 IMPORTANT — The cable on the ground is only one 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not alter architecture or opening widths 🚨 IMPORTANT — The Gauge should not be changed or minimized not alter architecture or opening widths. 🚨 IMPORTANT - Do not forget the handles.
The Red‑Lit Exit — Woman Turning Toward the Unknown Prompt (GPT‑2.0 style): A beautiful woman caught mid‑turn in a fog‑filled underground corridor, framed by a glowing red EXIT doorway. Her jacket swings outward with the motion, and her hair lifts slightly as if something moved past her. The fog thickens toward the far end of the hall, hiding everything except faint outlines of pillars. The red EXIT sign casts a strange glow across her face and the mist around her. The floor is glossy and empty, reflecting the doorway like a distorted mirror. Painterly cinematic realism, cold concrete textures, drifting fog, liminal emptiness, unsettling quiet.
A painting depicting an empty room with white walls and wooden doors, with sunlight streaming through the window onto the floor. The door is slightly open to reveal part of another wall painted in gray color. There is no furniture inside, creating a stark contrast between light and shadow on the grey surface. This scene evokes feelings of solitude or contemplation in the style of Bill Alexander. --ar 7:8 --v 5.2
Replace the empty doorway with a fully installed blower door test setup (blower in Minneapolis 3), matching the exact appearance, scale, and position from the reference image. The blower door must be tightly installed at the front depth of the doorway, aligned with the door jamb and floor threshold — not recessed toward the back of the entry. The frame must cover the full front perimeter of the doorway, and the door lock cylinder must not be visible. Completely seal the entire door frame on all sides with a tight red fabric cover, fully covering the perimeter with no visible gaps. The red fabric should stretch evenly across the top and both vertical sides, forming a proper airtight seal around the frame. Copy the red blower door fabric panel, black frame straps, circular white fan mounted at the bottom center, digital pressure gauge above it, connected cables, and the cable on the floor. The floor cable must extend forward and continue out of the image from the front edge of the frame. Maintain correct proportions, realistic perspective, natural lighting, and accurate shadows so it looks like a professionally installed real blower door test in this doorway. Do not change the surrounding walls, door trim, floor, lighting conditions, or environment. 🚨 VERY IMPORTANT - The frame around the cover must not be visible. The red fabric cover must completely wrap around and conceal the entire frame perimeter on all sides so that no part of the frame is exposed. 🚨 IMPORTANT - The red fabric panel appears slightly convex, bowing inward under external air pressure to visually indicate pressurization from outside. On the Other hand, When the red cover bulges outward, it appears smooth and wrinkle-free. 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not remove or modify the door panel The existing hinged wooden door panel must remain fully visible exactly as in the base image. 🚨 IMPORTANT — The cable on the ground is only one 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not alter architecture or opening widths 🚨 IMPORTANT — The Gauge should not be changed or minimized not alter architecture or opening widths. 🚨 IMPORTANT - Do not forget the handles.
A painting depicting an empty room with white walls and wooden doors, with sunlight streaming through the window onto the floor. The door is slightly open to reveal part of another wall painted in gray color. There is no furniture inside, creating a stark contrast between light and shadow on the grey surface. This scene evokes feelings of solitude or contemplation in the style of Bill Alexander. --ar 7:8 --v 5.2
The Red‑Lit Exit — Woman Turning Toward the Unknown Prompt (GPT‑2.0 style): A beautiful woman caught mid‑turn in a fog‑filled underground corridor, framed by a glowing red EXIT doorway. Her jacket swings outward with the motion, and her hair lifts slightly as if something moved past her. The fog thickens toward the far end of the hall, hiding everything except faint outlines of pillars. The red EXIT sign casts a strange glow across her face and the mist around her. The floor is glossy and empty, reflecting the doorway like a distorted mirror. Painterly cinematic realism, cold concrete textures, drifting fog, liminal emptiness, unsettling quiet.
First-person view walking through a dark, abandoned hospital corridor. The camera moves slowly and cautiously, as if the viewer is holding a flashlight. The flashlight beam swings across cracked tiled floors and stained walls, revealing flickering overhead lights and broken hospital signs. The corridor is long and mostly unlit — only one light out of several works, creating pools of dim light between deep shadows. Occasionally, the flashlight catches glimpses of empty doorways, peeling paint, or strange shapes at the end of the hall. The entire scene is tense, quiet, and cinematic, with strong light and shadow contrast. The motion is immersive and steady, evoking suspense.
Replace the empty doorway with a fully installed blower door test setup (blower in Minneapolis 3), matching the exact appearance, scale, and position from the reference image. The blower door must be tightly installed at the front depth of the doorway, aligned with the door jamb and floor threshold — not recessed toward the back of the entry. The frame must cover the full front perimeter of the doorway, and the door lock cylinder must not be visible. Completely seal the entire door frame on all sides with a tight red fabric cover, fully covering the perimeter with no visible gaps. The red fabric should stretch evenly across the top and both vertical sides, forming a proper airtight seal around the frame. Copy the red blower door fabric panel, black frame straps, circular white fan mounted at the bottom center, digital pressure gauge above it, connected cables, and the cable on the floor. The floor cable must extend forward and continue out of the image from the front edge of the frame. Maintain correct proportions, realistic perspective, natural lighting, and accurate shadows so it looks like a professionally installed real blower door test in this doorway. Do not change the surrounding walls, door trim, floor, lighting conditions, or environment. 🚨 VERY IMPORTANT - The frame around the cover must not be visible. The red fabric cover must completely wrap around and conceal the entire frame perimeter on all sides so that no part of the frame is exposed. 🚨 IMPORTANT - The red fabric panel appears slightly convex, bowing inward under external air pressure to visually indicate pressurization from outside. On the Other hand, When the red cover bulges outward, it appears smooth and wrinkle-free. 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not remove or modify the door panel The existing hinged wooden door panel must remain fully visible exactly as in the base image. 🚨 IMPORTANT — The cable on the ground is only one 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not alter architecture or opening widths 🚨 IMPORTANT — The Gauge should not be changed or minimized not alter architecture or opening widths. 🚨 IMPORTANT - Do not forget the handles.
First-person view walking through a dark, abandoned hospital corridor. The camera moves slowly and cautiously, as if the viewer is holding a flashlight. The flashlight beam swings across cracked tiled floors and stained walls, revealing flickering overhead lights and broken hospital signs. The corridor is long and mostly unlit — only one light out of several works, creating pools of dim light between deep shadows. Occasionally, the flashlight catches glimpses of empty doorways, peeling paint, or strange shapes at the end of the hall. The entire scene is tense, quiet, and cinematic, with strong light and shadow contrast. The motion is immersive and steady, evoking suspense.
A painting depicting an empty room with white walls and wooden doors, with sunlight streaming through the window onto the floor. The door is slightly open to reveal part of another wall painted in gray color. There is no furniture inside, creating a stark contrast between light and shadow on the grey surface. This scene evokes feelings of solitude or contemplation in the style of Bill Alexander. --ar 7:8 --v 5.2
The Red‑Lit Exit — Woman Turning Toward the Unknown Prompt (GPT‑2.0 style): A beautiful woman caught mid‑turn in a fog‑filled underground corridor, framed by a glowing red EXIT doorway. Her jacket swings outward with the motion, and her hair lifts slightly as if something moved past her. The fog thickens toward the far end of the hall, hiding everything except faint outlines of pillars. The red EXIT sign casts a strange glow across her face and the mist around her. The floor is glossy and empty, reflecting the doorway like a distorted mirror. Painterly cinematic realism, cold concrete textures, drifting fog, liminal emptiness, unsettling quiet.
The Red‑Lit Exit — Woman Turning Toward the Unknown Prompt (GPT‑2.0 style): A beautiful woman caught mid‑turn in a fog‑filled underground corridor, framed by a glowing red EXIT doorway. Her jacket swings outward with the motion, and her hair lifts slightly as if something moved past her. The fog thickens toward the far end of the hall, hiding everything except faint outlines of pillars. The red EXIT sign casts a strange glow across her face and the mist around her. The floor is glossy and empty, reflecting the doorway like a distorted mirror. Painterly cinematic realism, cold concrete textures, drifting fog, liminal emptiness, unsettling quiet.
First-person view walking through a dark, abandoned hospital corridor. The camera moves slowly and cautiously, as if the viewer is holding a flashlight. The flashlight beam swings across cracked tiled floors and stained walls, revealing flickering overhead lights and broken hospital signs. The corridor is long and mostly unlit — only one light out of several works, creating pools of dim light between deep shadows. Occasionally, the flashlight catches glimpses of empty doorways, peeling paint, or strange shapes at the end of the hall. The entire scene is tense, quiet, and cinematic, with strong light and shadow contrast. The motion is immersive and steady, evoking suspense.
Replace the empty doorway with a fully installed blower door test setup (blower in Minneapolis 3), matching the exact appearance, scale, and position from the reference image. The blower door must be tightly installed at the front depth of the doorway, aligned with the door jamb and floor threshold — not recessed toward the back of the entry. The frame must cover the full front perimeter of the doorway, and the door lock cylinder must not be visible. Completely seal the entire door frame on all sides with a tight red fabric cover, fully covering the perimeter with no visible gaps. The red fabric should stretch evenly across the top and both vertical sides, forming a proper airtight seal around the frame. Copy the red blower door fabric panel, black frame straps, circular white fan mounted at the bottom center, digital pressure gauge above it, connected cables, and the cable on the floor. The floor cable must extend forward and continue out of the image from the front edge of the frame. Maintain correct proportions, realistic perspective, natural lighting, and accurate shadows so it looks like a professionally installed real blower door test in this doorway. Do not change the surrounding walls, door trim, floor, lighting conditions, or environment. 🚨 VERY IMPORTANT - The frame around the cover must not be visible. The red fabric cover must completely wrap around and conceal the entire frame perimeter on all sides so that no part of the frame is exposed. 🚨 IMPORTANT - The red fabric panel appears slightly convex, bowing inward under external air pressure to visually indicate pressurization from outside. On the Other hand, When the red cover bulges outward, it appears smooth and wrinkle-free. 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not remove or modify the door panel The existing hinged wooden door panel must remain fully visible exactly as in the base image. 🚨 IMPORTANT — The cable on the ground is only one 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not alter architecture or opening widths 🚨 IMPORTANT — The Gauge should not be changed or minimized not alter architecture or opening widths. 🚨 IMPORTANT - Do not forget the handles.
A painting depicting an empty room with white walls and wooden doors, with sunlight streaming through the window onto the floor. The door is slightly open to reveal part of another wall painted in gray color. There is no furniture inside, creating a stark contrast between light and shadow on the grey surface. This scene evokes feelings of solitude or contemplation in the style of Bill Alexander. --ar 7:8 --v 5.2
First-person view walking through a dark, abandoned hospital corridor. The camera moves slowly and cautiously, as if the viewer is holding a flashlight. The flashlight beam swings across cracked tiled floors and stained walls, revealing flickering overhead lights and broken hospital signs. The corridor is long and mostly unlit — only one light out of several works, creating pools of dim light between deep shadows. Occasionally, the flashlight catches glimpses of empty doorways, peeling paint, or strange shapes at the end of the hall. The entire scene is tense, quiet, and cinematic, with strong light and shadow contrast. The motion is immersive and steady, evoking suspense.
The Red‑Lit Exit — Woman Turning Toward the Unknown Prompt (GPT‑2.0 style): A beautiful woman caught mid‑turn in a fog‑filled underground corridor, framed by a glowing red EXIT doorway. Her jacket swings outward with the motion, and her hair lifts slightly as if something moved past her. The fog thickens toward the far end of the hall, hiding everything except faint outlines of pillars. The red EXIT sign casts a strange glow across her face and the mist around her. The floor is glossy and empty, reflecting the doorway like a distorted mirror. Painterly cinematic realism, cold concrete textures, drifting fog, liminal emptiness, unsettling quiet.
Replace the empty doorway with a fully installed blower door test setup (blower in Minneapolis 3), matching the exact appearance, scale, and position from the reference image. The blower door must be tightly installed at the front depth of the doorway, aligned with the door jamb and floor threshold — not recessed toward the back of the entry. The frame must cover the full front perimeter of the doorway, and the door lock cylinder must not be visible. Completely seal the entire door frame on all sides with a tight red fabric cover, fully covering the perimeter with no visible gaps. The red fabric should stretch evenly across the top and both vertical sides, forming a proper airtight seal around the frame. Copy the red blower door fabric panel, black frame straps, circular white fan mounted at the bottom center, digital pressure gauge above it, connected cables, and the cable on the floor. The floor cable must extend forward and continue out of the image from the front edge of the frame. Maintain correct proportions, realistic perspective, natural lighting, and accurate shadows so it looks like a professionally installed real blower door test in this doorway. Do not change the surrounding walls, door trim, floor, lighting conditions, or environment. 🚨 VERY IMPORTANT - The frame around the cover must not be visible. The red fabric cover must completely wrap around and conceal the entire frame perimeter on all sides so that no part of the frame is exposed. 🚨 IMPORTANT - The red fabric panel appears slightly convex, bowing inward under external air pressure to visually indicate pressurization from outside. On the Other hand, When the red cover bulges outward, it appears smooth and wrinkle-free. 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not remove or modify the door panel The existing hinged wooden door panel must remain fully visible exactly as in the base image. 🚨 IMPORTANT — The cable on the ground is only one 🚨 IMPORTANT — Do not alter architecture or opening widths 🚨 IMPORTANT — The Gauge should not be changed or minimized not alter architecture or opening widths. 🚨 IMPORTANT - Do not forget the handles.
A painting depicting an empty room with white walls and wooden doors, with sunlight streaming through the window onto the floor. The door is slightly open to reveal part of another wall painted in gray color. There is no furniture inside, creating a stark contrast between light and shadow on the grey surface. This scene evokes feelings of solitude or contemplation in the style of Bill Alexander. --ar 7:8 --v 5.2