Closed JohnTigue closed 1 year ago
Get the Most Out of Stable Diffusion 2.1: Strategies for Improved Results by Olivio Sarikas, who is one of the best SD YouTubers, is a good primer with examples involving prompt and negative prompt. He talks much about the correlation between two major parameters, CFG and Steps.
Reddit: A simple prompt composer UI:
We had an end-of-year hackathon at the day job, and my team got really into Stable Diffusion. We noticed there's tons and tons of guidebooks, but couldn't find any tool to help writing prompts. So we put together a simple tool to help completing prompts, without having to memorize everything.
It's pretty basic, but hopefully it can help noobs understand some of the possibilities, and focus more on their intended image instead of remembering magic keywords.
It's all free, of course (the tool doesn't actually generate images, just the prompts, so there's no cost for us to keep it running).
https://lexica.art/aperture this makes prompting easy mode
Prompting is hard :)
Interesting asset from Openart; this one is in the form of a book, so a nice reference, or at-your=own-pace kind of resource.
Lots of examples and side by side stuff.
I stumbled upon a list of prompt tutorials:
Prompt Engineering Public Prompts: Completely free prompts with high generation probability. PromptoMania: Highly detailed prompt builder. Stable Diffusion Modifier Studies: Lots of styles with correlated prompts. Write-Ai-Art-Prompts: Ai assisted prompt builder. Prompt Hero: Gallery of images with their prompts included. Lexica Art: Another gallery all full of free images with attached prompts and similar styles. OpenArt: Gallery of images with prompts that can be remixed or favorited. Libraire: Gallery of images that are great at directing to similar images with prompts. Urania.ai - You should use "by [artist]" rather than simply ", [artist]" in your prompts.
Meet Lexica: A Massive Database Of AI-Generated Images — Including Prompts