Mitch

Stable Diffusion

An open-source image generator WITH deep control over the creative process.

BEST USES:

Image generation and editing

Custom AI art models

Local/offline image creation

 

LIMITATIONS:

Requires technical setup

Quality depends on the user’s skill

Can produce inconsistent results

FORMULA: [SUBJECT] + [STYLE] + [LIGHTING/DETAIL] + [NEGATIVE PROMPT].

Subject: Clearly define your main focus (e.g., “A futuristic astronaut,” “A cozy mountain cabin”).

Medium/Style: Set the artistic foundation (e.g., “Digital art,” “Oil painting,” “Cyberpunk aesthetic”).

Lighting/Detail: Enhance realism or mood (e.g., “Volumetric lighting,” “8k resolution,” “Intricate details”).

Negative Prompt: Crucial for SD. List what you don’t want (e.g., “Blurry, distorted hands, extra limbs, low resolution”).

SHORTCUTS:

Attention/Weighting: Use parentheses to emphasize specific words (photorealistic:1.5) makes it much more realistic).

Prompt Blending: Use the [from:to:when] syntax to switch subjects mid-gen [cat:dog:0.3] starts as cat & finishes as dog.

Shorten & Test: Start with a simple prompt and add only 1–2 keywords at a time to see their specific impact.

Styles Dropdown: In tools like AUTOMATIC1111, use the “Styles” menu to save and quickly apply complex prompt/negative prompt combinations.

CHEAT CODES:

Sampler Selection: Choose Euler A for speed and soft results, or DPM++ 2M Karras for high-detail, realistic textures.

CFG Scale: Usually kept between 7–9. Higher values (15+) follow your prompt strictly but can “burn” the image; lower values (3–5) give the AI more creative freedom.

Steps: 20–30 steps are usually enough for modern models (like SDXL); going higher (50+) rarely improves the image but increases generation time.

Resolution: Stick to the native resolutions of your model for the best quality (e.g., 512×512 for SD 1.5, or 1024×1024 for SDXL).

ADVANCED:

ControlNet: Use this to guide the AI with a specific structure (like a pose, a depth map, or a sketch) instead of just words.

LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation): Small, downloadable “add-ons” that teach SD a very specific character, object, or artistic style (e.g., “Studio Ghibli LoRA”).

Img2Img: Upload your own image and use a text prompt to “transform” it into a new style while keeping the original composition.

Inpainting: Use a brush to “paint over” a specific part of an image you want to change, like swapping a character’s shirt or fixing a background error.

Stable Diffusion Cert

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