I once used the term "beefy" (as in big or muscular) with good results. There actually was "beef" in the output as well but it just didn't look as good when I stopped using that word.
AI Art & Image Generation
A place to share images and art generated by artificial intelligence and similar tools.
Rules:
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All posts must be relevant to image generation with artificial intelligence.
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Please include the name of the AI or tool used to generate your image at beginning of your post to promote searchability. Example: "[Midjourney] Picture of a lake."
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Recommended Communities:
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Check out !imageai@sh.itjust.works for more AI Images.
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Check out !dnd_ai@lemmy.world for discussion about AI tools you can use in your Dungeons & Dragons games.
So from what I've noticed, AI tends to make women impossibly skinny by default. Bing really didn't like talking about women's bodies, at least in the Dalle2 iteration. Athletic often resulted in just as skinny women. Fat got flagged. Hourglass figure got flagged. Normal body proportions didn't do anything. Anatomically correct is a mistake.
Bing did like buxom, which it understood to mean morbidly obese, and "kinda-" and "semi-" are modifiers it accepted. So if I'm trying to generate a picture featuring a humanly possible woman, I'll use the phrase "kinda-buxom" or "semi-buxom."
I wish I understood what punctuation and symbols do in a Dalle prompt.
I'm not 100% sure how much punctuation matters outside of the general prompt formatting. You seem to be able to get away with spelling errors so I can only assume there's some sort of error correction/interpretation layer in play though I can't say how robust it is.
no- is an strange prefix. No-knees means nothing covering the knees. No-torso means topless.
That could be very useful, I'll definitely have to do some testing with that.
Using 'muscled' on it's own increases muscle density without changing body shape, but using 'muscle bound' also changes body shape to be more like a body builder with wider shoulders. I use a local install so I don't hit keyword limitations, but if you get more creative with your descriptivism you can improve results that might otherwise be blocked.
For example, if you want fat people try: chunky, hefty, thick, weighty, pillowy, rotund, robust, expansive, inflated, massive, engorged, enlarged, bigger, round, soft, broad, chonky, stuffed, over stuffed, filled, over-fed.
I put in "A photo of the horror" and got lots of gore