Lawlas's Yiffymix 2.0 (furry model) Reviews
__p***nq6sg1xyT0____p***nq6sg1xyT1__This mix gives absolutely gorgeous results with minimal effort.__p***nq6sg1xyT2__ In-fact, the shorter the prompt you give, the better the results seem to turn out.__p***nq6sg1xyT3____p***nq6sg1xyT4__It has a very wide range, with some absolutely gorgeous results if you set it up correctly.__p***nq6sg1xyT5____p***nq6sg1xyT6__Unfortunately if you're looking for something very specific, you're likely going to spend a lot of time fighting some of the model. Namely human skin, especially when including clothes.__p***nq6sg1xyT7____p***nq6sg1xyT8__It seems to have a strange issue with longer prompts losing more detail, and flat out ignoring heavily weighted prompt tags. This happens regardless of CFG scaling. (I'd love any tips on why this might be the case.)__p***nq6sg1xyT9____p***nq6sg1xyT10__Complaints aside, If you're just wanting to generate some gorgeous art without putting in much effort, Lawlas mix is very easy to recommend.__p***nq6sg1xyT11____p***nq6sg1xyT12__I look forward to the next iteration to see if Lawla can improve on their absolutely fantastic model further.__p***nq6sg1xyT13____p***nq6sg1xyT14__Note: All of my examples are __p***nq6sg1xyT15__raw output with no inpainting, loras, or hypernetworks__p***nq6sg1xyT16__. I wanted this review to cover just how the model performed on it's own without much manual intervention.__p***nq6sg1xyT17__
It produces great art without the need for overly-engineered prompts or specific artist names. I like it a lot.





