Type | |
Stats | 158 59 259 |
Reviews | (35) |
Published | Jan 20, 2025 |
Base Model | |
Training | Steps: 1,800 Epochs: 7 |
Usage Tips | Strength: 1 |
Trigger Words | halo over head angelic white feather wings angel divine protector |
Hash | AutoV2 EDB363DBFB |
π βββ Prompting tips below βββ π
This LoRa creates more consistent humanized angels with halo's that aren't either attached to the head or suspended by something which Flux can end up doing. Flux gets halos right more often than not but gets it wrong just often enough for it to be annoying if you're trying to make a bunch of angel images to animate for a Project Odyssey video π
It is also able to put halos on things that aren't humans. There are also other Flux angel models available, but I prefer a more modest portrayal of angels that have halos for the things I'm trying to do so I created my own.
This problem can get worse depending on the other LoRa's you're using in addition to not aligning properly to the head. An example of an "attached" halo on base Flux and lora:
Prompting:
Halo over (subject's) head
Feathered wings
Prompting assistance:
Angelic (better with humans and if you want wings)
Divine (better for inanimate objects - if you don't want wings)
More complex:
An angel holding something that also has a halo requires more prompting
Start with subject that isn't the angel and specify it has its own halo
Then end the prompt stating that both the angel and (subject) each have their own halos
When used with many other LoRas:
Captioning avoided the term "angel" or any derivative
The training maps on to the concept of an angel pretty well
The true term for the subject is "divine protector" which Flux does not have any inherent attachment to
If the concept is struggling when used with multiple other LoRas, it is better to refer to the subject as either an "angelic divine protector" or just "divine protector" while still specifying for the halo and/or wings as the concept will no longer have to compete with the other LoRa's understanding of an angel.