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Franklin Booth Style

185
520
24
Verified:
SafeTensor
Type
LoRA
Stats
488
1,121
Reviews
Published
Dec 15, 2023
Base Model
SD 1.5
Training
Steps: 4,000
Epochs: 10
Usage Tips
Clip Skip: 1
Strength: 1
Hash
AutoV2
23FF58449A

This model has been relocated to πŸ€— Hugging Face.

https://huggingface.co/JerryOrbachJr/Franklin-Booth-Style


About the Artist

Franklin Booth (July 8, 1874 – August 25, 1948) was an American artist known for his detailed pen-and-ink illustrations. His unique style was formed by his early practice of copying wood engraving illustrations. His skill as a draftsman and recognizable style made him a popular magazine illustrator in the early 20th-century.

The LoRA

This LoRA was created using 40 high-resolution scans of some of Booth's best work and can add interesting line-shading effects and other aspects of Booth's style to your images. It's a work in progress, and feedback, including suggestions, is welcome.

Settings

  • Dimensions: Bigger images will generally require lower strength - at lower resolutions it seems like SD is combining lines into a gray blob. 512 in either dimension should be a minimum, and if you can do 768+ (with or without "Kohya Shrink Wrap"), you will likely get better results.

  • CFG: the lower the CFG, the less strength you will need to see the effect. I suggest starting at 3.5 and going down from there if possible. 6 is probably the highest I've used with this.

  • Fighting/Working With the Style: the more old-timey, pen-and-inky, and realistic your prompt is, the lower the strength you will need. Concepts with a lot of round shapes will need a higher strength. If you add "black and white engraving" to your prompt it's usually like adding +0.5 to the strength without losing image quality, so give that a try if the strength gets to high and your image is suffering

  • Strength: taking all that into effect, you will usually need a weight of between 0.5 and 1.5 to get a good effect with this LoRA. Start at 1 and see how it goes!

Compatible Models

This LoRA should work with a very wide variety of models, although it will likely not work well with models trained exclusively on amine (if there are models out there trained on manga I'd bet it would work well with them, though).

It's been tested and has created some good images with the following models: