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📌 My Style Moodboard

Curate Your Personal Fashion Aesthetic 👗

Prompt

A fashion mood board collage. Surround a portrait with cutouts of the individual items the model is wearing. Add handwritten notes and sketches in a playful, marker-style font, and include the brand name and source of each item in English. The overall aesthetic should be creative and cute.

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Luxury Christmas Overlay - Before
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Luxury Christmas Overlay - After
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Fashion
Luxury Christmas Overlay

Gold Line Art Deco ✨

Use the uploaded photo as the base. ABSOLUTE RULES (important) Do NOT convert the image to black and white. Do NOT change any colors of the original photo. Do NOT alter the person’s face, skin, hair, makeup, clothing, lighting, or background. Do NOT add any filters, texture changes, color grading, or desaturation. Only add line-art on top of the existing full-color photo. GOAL Create a high-fashion Christmas editorial look by adding elegant hand-drawn Christmas line-art decorations ON TOP of the full-color photograph. LINE-ART STYLE Thin, clean, hand-drawn outlines only No fill color, no shading Stroke color must be golden lines (Auto-select whichever has best visibility) Slight organic wobble to mimic real ink/pen Line-art must appear drawn onto the photo, not replacing it CHRISTMAS DECORATION RULES 1. Decorations on the person (but not covering eyes, nose, or mouth) Add subtle line-art such as: Santa hat outline placed naturally on the head Santa beard outline (small, elegant, optional) Holly leaves & berries drawn along the hair or collar Small stars or sparkles on clothing contours Snowflake outlines on sleeves or pants 2. Integrated into clothing and hair Flowing poinsettia outlines following fabric folds Mistletoe, holly branches Candy cane stripes outlined on arms or shoulders 3. In the background (perspective-aware) Draw line-art of: Christmas tree outline Wreath outline Garland or string lights following wall perspective Gingerbread man outline Hanging ornaments, bells, ribbons Candy canes, snowflakes, twinkling stars Placement must: Respect background depth Wrap around objects realistically Never obscure the person’s face INTEGRATION All line-art must float cleanly on top of the existing photo Do NOT blend, repaint, recolor, or modify the underlying pixels Do NOT desaturate or recolor the original image The result must look like someone carefully drew golden and black Christmas doodles on a glossy magazine photo FINAL OUTPUT A full-color photograph with tasteful, high-fashion, hand-drawn Christmas line-art decorations overlayed on top, while the original colors, textures, and lighting remain 100% untouched.
📝 My Bio Scrapbook - Before
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📝 My Bio Scrapbook - After
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Social Media
📝 My Bio Scrapbook

Cute Editorial Notes & Sticker Vibes 🎀

Add messy red handwritten Japanese comments, expressive doodles, and energetic editorial-style notes directly on top of the image, as if written with a red marker over printed photos. The handwriting should feel spontaneous, unfiltered, emotional, slightly chaotic, and personal—almost like someone’s private photo journal or annotated scrapbook page. All handwritten text must: – be in Japanese – appear hand-drawn, uneven, casual, and overlapping – be positive in tone The content of each handwritten note must automatically analyze the uploaded image and praise the woman based on what is visible, such as her outfit, expression, pose, styling, makeup, or mood. The comments should feel affectionate, admiring, or supportive, and tailored to what stands out in the photo. Do not repeat generic praise. Instead, generate unique personal compliments that match the image attributes. Examples must NOT be shown explicitly in the prompt. Instead, describe the logic: “The system should observe the clothing style, face, mood, posture, accessories, or color choices and produce handwritten comments that positively highlight what is visually appealing or admirable about her.” Also add: – arrows pointing to notable fashion details – underlines beneath interesting areas – circled elements – crossed-out planning notes like editing marks – layered cut-and-paste collage scraps (magazine style) – small torn paper labels – sticker-like notations – tape-texture fragments Overall direction: Create a visually intense scrapbook-journal composition, filled with affectionate handwriting, red editorial markings, and collage fragments, giving the entire image an emotional and expressive “personal praise commentary” aesthetic.
Ultra Wide Angle Edit - Before
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Ultra Wide Angle Edit - After
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Photography
Ultra Wide Angle Edit

Dynamic Street Perspective 👟

Extreme wide-angle perspective and dynamic pose remix edit. This is an EDIT of the original image, not a new character. Use the original image as a strict reference for: – the person’s identity, hairstyle, and overall fashion style, – the general type of background and location (same street, same room, same beach, same kind of architecture, etc.). You are allowed to completely change the camera position, angle, and pose, but you must keep the scene in the SAME location and keep the SAME person and outfit design. Camera and perspective: – Use an ultra wide-angle or fisheye feeling lens (around 12–18mm full-frame look). – The camera angle MUST change significantly from the original: use dramatic angles such as • worm’s-eye view from directly below looking up, • bird’s-eye view from directly above looking down, • very low angle from the ground, • high angle from above, • tilted Dutch angles. – Always create strong foreshortening: body parts close to the lens look huge, while the rest of the body falls away in perspective. – The final result must look like a bold fashion or street photo, fully photorealistic, not illustration or anime. Background consistency: – Keep the same location as the original image: same street, same bridge, same room, same studio, same beach, same general structures and materials. – Do NOT replace the background with a completely different place. – Because the camera angle changes, it is allowed and expected that different parts of the environment become visible. – When new areas appear, extend the original environment logically (same buildings, fences, road markings, walls, colors, materials, lighting style), as if the camera moved within the same place. Body parts near the lens (1–2 parts, sometimes 3): – In each edit, choose ONE or TWO main body parts to be extremely close to the lens (sometimes even THREE in more complex poses). – Vary them from image to image, do NOT always use the same body part. – Allowed near-the-lens parts include: • one or both hands / fingers reaching toward the camera, • one or both feet / shoes / boots near the lens, • knees or thighs, • face very close to the lens, • shoulders or chest close to the lens in a leaning pose. – The chosen body parts should come extremely close to the lens, almost touching it, with visible skin texture, fabric texture, and realistic wide-angle distortion. Pose and overall body (complex and varied): – Create strong, cool, dynamic poses that match the extreme perspective. – Randomly use different pose types, including: • standing with one leg or one arm reaching toward the camera, • crouching or squatting low to the ground, • sitting on the floor or on objects, • lying on the ground with legs or feet toward the lens, • leaning forward aggressively toward the camera, • twisting the body, crossing legs, or arching the back for more dynamic lines. – Allow complex poses where: • both hands are near the lens forming shapes (peace signs, triangles, frames, pointing toward the viewer), • both feet are toward the lens, • one hand and one foot are both large in the foreground, • the face is close to the lens while hands or feet are also visible in perspective. – Maintain believable anatomy even with extreme foreshortening. Angle and attitude (randomized): – Randomize camera angle and orientation (up, down, side, Dutch tilt) while keeping the composition visually balanced and powerful. – Keep the vibe cool, confident, and fashion/editorial or street style, depending on the original outfit. – Facial expressions can vary (serious, playful, confident, mysterious), but must still look like the same person. Lighting and rendering: – Keep the general time of day and lighting mood similar to the original (night vs day, indoor vs outdoor, soft vs hard light), but you may enhance contrast and color to make the image punchy and dramatic. – Maintain realistic shadows and contact points with the ground or floor. – High-resolution, sharp details with clear skin texture, fabric weave, and material highlights. Variation and randomness: – Each edit should look noticeably different from the original image and from other edits, with different: • camera angles, • pose types, • which body parts are closest to the lens, • orientation (straight, tilted, from above, from below). – Avoid repeating the exact same single-foot-close-up composition; produce a wide variety of dynamic poses and angles. Strict rules: – Do NOT change the person into someone else. – Do NOT change the outfit type; only restyle it through pose, perspective, and small natural movement of clothing. – Do NOT move the scene to a completely different location; always stay in a plausible extension of the original place. – Do NOT add text, logos, watermarks, or graphic design elements. – Do NOT switch to painting, illustration, or anime style; keep it photorealistic. Overall: Transform the original photo into a dramatic, photorealistic, ultra wide-angle shot with an extreme camera angle (including views from directly below or above), where one or more body parts are right next to the lens and look huge, the rest of the body recedes in perspective, and the same person strikes a stylish, complex, powerful pose in a consistent, expanded version of the original environment.