You edit a face. The background shifts slightly. You run it again. The jacket warps. By the third iteration, the image has drifted far from where you started.
This is the core problem with repeated image editing. This workflow fixes it.
Edit freely. Everything that shouldn't change, doesn't.
Run now on Floyo

Why This Setup Is Different
🎨 Edits Without Drift
Standard img2img workflows apply edits globally. Every generation introduces small shifts, backgrounds move, textures change, fine details deform.
The Consistency LoRA targets this directly. It reduces pixel drift so the parts of your image you didn't touch stay exactly where they were. The result:
backgrounds stay aligned between before and after
reflections and fine structures hold across iterations
Repeated edits on the same base don't compound deformation
🧠 How It Works
Flux2 Klein 9B runs in edit/img2img mode. It's built for precise, photorealistic image editing with strong spatial understanding.
Flux2-Klein-9B-Consistency LoRA attaches on top. No trigger words needed. Load it, set the strength, run your edit. It works with any Klein 9B edit workflow you already have.
Together they give you:
stable identity across multiple generations
scene and environment consistency without manual masking
controlled edits that affect only what your prompt targets
🔒 Strength-Controlled Precision
The LoRA strength slider is your main control. Typical range is 0.2 to 1.0.
Low strength (0.2–0.4): light consistency anchor, more creative freedom
Mid strength (0.5–0.7): balanced edits apply cleanly, structure holds
High strength (0.8–1.0): maximum stability, tightest structural lock
Start at 0.5. Adjust based on how much the edit needs to change versus how much needs to stay the same.
⚡ Works With Any Klein 9B Edit Workflow
Drop the Consistency LoRA into your existing Klein 9B setup. Face swap, clothes swap, background replacement, and inpainting work alongside all of them. No workflow rebuilding required.
Key Inputs
Base Image
The image you want to edit. Higher-quality base images produce better consistency results. The LoRA has more stable structure to anchor to.
Works well with:
clean portrait or product photos
images with defined subjects against readable backgrounds
any image you've already used in a Klein 9B edit workflow
Edit Prompt
Describe only what you want to change. The more specific your prompt, the more targeted the edit.
Examples:
Hair change:
"change hair to short blonde bob, keep everything else identical"Outfit swap:
"wearing a red leather jacket, preserve face, pose, and background exactly"Expression edit:
"subtle smile, keep identity, lighting, and background unchanged"
Negative prompt: "background changes, warped anatomy, shifted lighting, distorted textures, inconsistent environment"
LoRA Strength
Start at 0.5
Increase toward 1.0 if the structure is drifting between edits
Decrease toward 0.2 if the edit isn't applying strongly enough
CFG and Steps
CFG: 3.5–4.5 for most edits
Steps: 20 for production output, 8–12 for fast iteration
What This Is Great For
👤 Face and Character Editing
Change hair, expression, clothing, or accessories while keeping identity, pose, and environment locked. Run 10 variations of the same character without accumulating deformation.
👗 Fashion and Product Edits
Swap colors, logos, or textures on garments and products. The garment shape and background hold between versions critical for e-commerce and catalog work.
🎬 Multi-Shot Storyboards and Comics
Use Klein 9B edits to generate multiple panels of the same character in the same setting. The Consistency LoRA keeps the character and environment visually stable across every frame without manual alignment work.
🔁 Iterative Editing Pipelines
If your workflow runs the same base image through multiple edit passes, normal Klein 9B accumulates drift over iterations. The Consistency LoRA stops that compounding effect. Each pass stays anchored to the original structure.
What to Watch Out For
Too high strength limits the edit. At 1.0, the LoRA locks structure so tightly that some edits won't apply fully. If your prompt isn't taking effect, drop strength to 0.5–0.6.
It anchors structure, not style. The Consistency LoRA keeps spatial elements stable. It doesn't prevent lighting or color tone shifts if your prompt or CFG drives them. Add lighting descriptors to your prompt if color consistency matters.
Works best with targeted prompts. Vague prompts produce vague edits even with the LoRA active. The more specific your edit instruction, the cleaner the result.
VRAM. Flux2 Klein 9B needs 24GB+ for full quality. On 16GB, reduce output resolution. Below 16GB, use a cloud GPU.


