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Wire-frame glasses - small rectangular

22

298

70

16

Updated: Dec 31, 2024

clothingglasseswire-frame

Verified:

SafeTensor

Type

LoRA

Stats

187

49

100

Reviews

Published

Dec 31, 2024

Base Model

Flux.1 D

Training

Steps: 1,280
Epochs: 40

Usage Tips

Strength: 1

Trigger Words

small rectangular wire-frame glasses

Hash

AutoV2
1B7BE6267C

The FLUX.1 [dev] Model is licensed by Black Forest Labs. Inc. under the FLUX.1 [dev] Non-Commercial License. Copyright Black Forest Labs. Inc.

IN NO EVENT SHALL BLACK FOREST LABS, INC. BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH USE OF THIS MODEL.

Version 2.0 update:
after I connected the grid pattern sometimes visible in bright or dark parts of the images with the fp4 training with OneTrainer, I switched to fp8 training, which got rid of the pattern. But I have to redo all my LoRAs to fix them all and i did some minor corrections on the dataset. Nothing changed in usage, except the tag is now <lora:WireframeGlasses-SmallRectangular-step01280:1>.


Flux seems pretty limited if you want glasses - mostly the more round sort with a thicker frame. I intended to make a all-in-one LoRA first, but that didn't work - if you want to specify between normal and small glasses, round, rectangular and oval shapes you had to train each one separately.

This creates small rectangular wire-frame glasses - to acquire my dataset, I had to make some kind of internet archaeology, going back in the late 2000's when those were in vogue for a small period of time.

Albeit not strictly neccessary, a <lora:WireframeGlasses-rectangularSmall-50:1> tag increases the influence. It has also the potential of creating several colors, like the blue one in the example set.