Not long ago I presented my experiments on illustrating famous fairy tales with #Midjourney v4 at the #IRCDL23 (http://lacam.di.uniba.it/IRCDL23/) This experimentation is part of the VAST project https://www.vast-project.eu/ that studies values present in different texts, including some fairy tales recorded by the Grimm brothers. My generations were an aside activity, and I attempted to generate 5 illustrations for each of 5 fairy tales: #LittleRedRidingHood, #Cinderella, #LittleSnowWhite, #HanselAndGretel, and #FaithfulJohannes
With AI text-to-image generator models gaining popularity, there's a lot of talk about #promptEngineering, the process of refining the textual input used to obtain a desired result. However, calling the current practices "engineering" is an exaggeration considering that 1. it commonly limits itself to everyone using their ad-hoc techniques, 2. that are barely validated, and 3. and transferability across models is not even considered. For an overview of practices among #aiartists, consider Jonas Oppenlaender's ethnographic study (https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.13988) He gives a good idea of some of the employed witchcraft, such as quality boosters, repetitions and magic words
To initiate such a process, I engaged with an investigation following the principles of action research (https://sonyaterborg.com/2016/02/17/action-research/) - an iterative methodology where research and practice go hand in hand. While a task is being completed, in parallel a reproducible process is being developed, lessons learned are being collected.
@mapto Great diagram, wish I had that talent!
@davoloid yes, it is great, but credits go to the author of the link in the post, not to myself. Anyway, there's a whole market for this, and it has lots of names like https://twitter.com/hashtag/liveillustration and https://www.pinterest.com/search/pins/?q=%23graphicrecording
Fulltext at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3365/#paper6