UI: ComfyUI
Model: STOIQNewrealityFLUXSD_F1DAlpha
A scan of a comic book page by Neal Adams.
The image is divided into two panels.
The first panel shows Sailor Moon saying “I’m here to help!”
The second panel shows an exasperated Batman facepalming.
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One thing that I like about some Stable Diffusion-derived models is that they have been trained on the works of many artists, can replicate styles.
Flux, while rather more-sophisticated in many ways, including the ability to use natural-language image descriptions, has – probably intentionally – not been. And while I really like Flux’s functionality, I’ve been kind of unhappy about losing that.
However, there are models derived from Flux – as the one used here – that have had that trained back in.
EDIT: Note that this model still can’t do some of the things that I’ve done in the past with Stable Diffusion-derived models trained on a lot of artworks, like these landscape paintings in the style of Casilear, but the fact that it can do something at all is a considerable improvement over the dev version of vanilla Flux. I did read one comment that the stable version of Flux supports artist names, but then you’re stuck using their service to do your generation; the stable model of Flux isn’t distributed.
You’re killing it with these gens.
Thanks, though only “Cats” was really just put up for the looks; the other three were to show off some functionality to other folks who might be doing local generation themselves, to let them know about functionality that I’d run into that I wanted and give 'em a heads-up as to it being possible (a way to get decent food photography, a way to emulate artist styles again under Flux, and that the ability to generate progressive transformations in Flux exists).