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

in a horror house prompts

very few results

6 months ago

An award-winning oil painting masterpiece of gothic horror, drenched in dread and decay, depicting a deeply disturbing, broken antique doll abandoned in the rotting attic of a long-forgotten house. The doll sits slumped against a crumbling wooden beam, its body shattered in places—one arm missing, porcelain skull cracked wide open to reveal the hollow black within. Jagged fractures run down its face like veins, and from its single remaining eye, a glassy stare glints with unnatural awareness. Its dress, once delicate lace, hangs in tatters—stained with water damage, soot, and something darker. Mold creeps across the fabric in blotches of sickly green and grey. Strands of coarse hair cling to its scalp, damp and matted. A faint trail of something red and dry streaks down its chin, and its grin—half-formed, half-split—is too wide, too human. The room around it is soaked in dampness and decay. The wallpaper peels in curled sheets, revealing blackened, mold-covered boards beneath. The ceiling sags with rot, and rainwater drips slowly from a rusted pipe in the corner, pooling into a warped floorboard that has split open like a wound. The light is minimal—just a faint, sickly greenish glow leaking through a broken window veiled with grime, casting long shadows that twist unnaturally. The palette is dank and heavy—deep, desaturated hues of mildew green, rotting wood brown, ashen grey, and blood-maroon. The brushwork is thick, expressive, and moody, every stroke enhancing the feeling of moist air, silence, and a presence just beyond the frame. The overall effect is suffocating and magnetic—a visual whisper from the darker corners of memory and imagination. A chilling, unforgettable oil masterpiece—where the doll doesn’t just sit, but lingers

6 months ago

Create a masterpiece oil painting in a realistic, atmospheric style, inspired by the chilling events in the suburbs of southern Sydney. The scene is set at twilight under an ominous blood-red sky, with a rising full moon partially obscured by swirling clouds. In the foreground, a large, shadow-drenched shed looms ominously on a secluded property near Barton Park, lit only by flickering torchlight. Cult members, cloaked in crimson and black robes, are arranged in a semicircle, performing a sinister ritual. Their faces are partly masked, their hands raised in supplication or soaked in dark fluids—devotion or madness indistinguishable. At the center of the ritual space, a symbolic altar of stone and rusted iron holds the carved remains of ancient demonic sigils from a forgotten grimoire. Faint outlines of chained female figures can be seen in the shadowed distance—ghostly silhouettes of captivity, not detailed graphically, but clearly tragic in tone. In the background, barely visible through the trees, sits a house of torment—its windows barred, a dim light glowing within. A religious building looms even farther away, its steeple outlined under the cursed moon, bearing silent witness to the desecration. Above, the night sky swirls with unnatural energy, as if a gateway is opening between worlds. The painting should evoke a palpable tension: horror without gratuity, symbolism without sensationalism. The tone is eerie, cinematic, and investigative, with subtle nods to the task force closing in—perhaps a pair of headlights breaking the treeline, or the faint silhouette of Detective Tank Dodge watching from a ridge, jaw tight, gun ready, truth dawning. This is a composition of duality—sacrifice and salvation, evil and justice—locked in a battle beneath a cursed sky.

7 months ago

An award-winning, psychologically charged double exposure oil painting that encapsulates the chilling tension and horror of Misery. The central figure is an injured writer, Paul Sheldon, trapped in a secluded home, his face a portrait of pain, fear, and growing desperation. His image blends with the twisted and claustrophobic environment of Annie Wilkes’ home, where his reality begins to unravel. The double exposure effect seamlessly merges Paul’s form with the oppressive, isolated surroundings—his body dissolving into the stark, unsettling details of the home: the dimly lit rooms, the ominous tools she uses to imprison and torture him, and the distorted shadows of Annie Wilkes lurking in the background. Annie’s eerie presence flickers through the composition, her wild eyes and terrifying grin subtly woven into the very structure of the house, merging with Paul’s image as the lines between captor and captive blur. The palette is dominated by muted, earthy tones of dark wood, grayish-blue light, and blood-red accents, emphasizing the isolation, tension, and violence that permeates the scene. The oil paint’s textured brushstrokes convey both the suffocating atmosphere of the home and the brutal physical and psychological torment that Paul endures. The image of the typewriter and the tools of his captivity are subtly integrated into his form, representing his helplessness and the looming threat of Annie’s unhinged obsession. This double exposure masterpiece evokes themes of fear, captivity, obsession, and survival, capturing the emotional horror and claustrophobic terror of Misery in a haunting, visually stunning manner.