this post was submitted on 03 Dec 2023
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AI Art & Image Generation
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A place to share images and art generated by artificial intelligence and similar tools.
Rules:
- All posts must be relevant to image generation with artificial intelligence.
- 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."
- It's not required, but we encourage you to include the prompt used to generate the image in the description of your post.
- To avoid spam, please try to limit yourself to five posts a day. Feel free to add as many images to your posts as you'd like.
- Please keep NSFW content to a minimum. Risque content is allowed, but pornographic AI art is not. There are plenty of other places to share that.
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Recommended Communities:
- Check out !imageai@sh.itjust.works for more AI Images.
- Check out !dnd_ai@lemmy.world for discussion about AI tools you can use in your Dungeons & Dragons games.
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It is interesting to think about generated images. It really is just seeing what it does with the words we put together, but each user comes away with a little bit different style from the choice of words, the ideas each of us are interested in, and which variant from the responses we choose.
So while you can't take much ownership over the computational work that was done to make the image, I think you can take ownership of the style and thought that you put into it.
I like to think I've got at least an impressive enough vocabulary to work with as a professional writer :D
Though it does feel weird to be that descriptive to a piece of software. It's almost like you're telling it a little story about the thing you saw in your head and it's trying to literally 'paint the picture'. Bing actually encourages you to write more in-depth prompts, and I actually ran out of space on some of them, while I definitely had potential details to share with it. I suppose that means I'm at least giving it enough to work with :D
Yes, it's weird and so cool how being good at describing things suddenly became a good catalyst for the computer to spit out whatever pictures we have in mind.