After my rather dark dieselpunk adventures, I wanted to do something lighter and more my style :)
I've seen some really nice use of different mediums in this community before and I wanted to explore their differences. Below are several fairies, each made with a different medium in their prompt.
Description: This is the base prompt. I chose isometric because it gives a nice viewing angle.
Prompt: isometric view, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
Description: This is a clay image. I was really amazed with this one, expecting more of a play-doh effect with a prompt like clay.
Prompt: isometric view, clay, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
Description: This is a knitted image. Many of my attempts ended up looking rather fake, but this one turned out really well.
Prompt: isometric view, knitted, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
Description: A paper fairy! This is one of my favorites, everything about it looks quite real.
Prompt: isometric view, paper craft, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
Description: A porcelain fairy. This one is so nice I wish it was real.
Prompt: isometric view, porcelain, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
Description: A tilt-shifted image. Tilt shifting is a camera technique you can use to make normal photos look like miniatures. I guess Midjourney skipped that step and turned everything in a miniature :)
Prompt: isometric view, tilt shift, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
Description: And lastly a mix of the previous two. A tilt-shifted porcelain fairy. She looks so delicate. The tilt-shift prompt really has a strong effect.
Prompt: isometric view, porcelain, tilt shift, a fairy sitting among flowers --ar 4:3
That's it. I hope you enjoy them. Sorry if I'm a bit wordy with my posts, I like to add a personal touch with what I share.
edited because my formatting skills suck
Tilt shift is an interesting prompt I need to try now.
For something like "clay" I wish there was a way to reverse the image to see the primary sources used.
Thanks for sharing
You should! I'll be interested to see what you can make with it, if you're willing to share of course.