I bet that DALL-E users have worked up some kind of way to get that effect, because it has to have come up.
thinks
I haven’t used DALL-E, but what about appending “in the style of the scream by edvard munch” or something, so that there are more references to the painting in the sentence? I’d assume that if that has any effect, it’d also affect Sailor Moon.
If a style is proving elusive, try ‘doubling down’ with related terms (artists, years, media, movement) years, e.g: rather than
simply ‘…by Picasso’, try '…Cubist painting by Pablo Picasso, 1934, colourful, geometric work of Cubism, in the style of “Two
Girls Reading.” Or try unbundling!)
These are all using things like “in the style of edvard munch’s scream”. Dall-e 3 (what bing uses) does like more prompts like you say, but there is also a lot of “extras” added to your prompt you can not see, meaning you can get drastically different things from the same prompt. It also means sometimes you get neat alternate sailor moons you did not ask for:
considers
I bet that DALL-E users have worked up some kind of way to get that effect, because it has to have come up.
thinks
I haven’t used DALL-E, but what about appending “in the style of the scream by edvard munch” or something, so that there are more references to the painting in the sentence? I’d assume that if that has any effect, it’d also affect Sailor Moon.
googles
This is a book about DALL-E 2 prompt techniques:
https://dallery.gallery/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/The-DALL·E-2-prompt-book-v1.02.pdf
These are all using things like “in the style of edvard munch’s scream”. Dall-e 3 (what bing uses) does like more prompts like you say, but there is also a lot of “extras” added to your prompt you can not see, meaning you can get drastically different things from the same prompt. It also means sometimes you get neat alternate sailor moons you did not ask for: