INTRODUCTION
THE POWER OF AI
AI imaging has evolved very fast in very short time and it's still only the beginning. With that I mean that the outcome might be the same depending on artist but the process from an idea to the final result will surely change.
Let's be very honest here...
I know that many people will never accept AI imaging as an artform and I truly understand that. There is a lot of crap out there.
But there is a lot of creative and beautiful stuff too.
I know that many people will never accept AI imaging as an artform and I truly understand that. There is a lot of crap out there.
But there is a lot of creative and beautiful stuff too.
My approach
When I started out with experimenting with AI imaging, not long ago, I found out very fast that I wanted to do things differently. The best way to do that is with real-time AI image generators.
Using real-time you can see the results straight away and you have to be careful to capture the right moment because you get hundreds of different results with one stroke (using draw-to-image) or with one word (text-to-image) or even with changing the background colour.
When using a combination of draw and text it's even more complicated to catch the right moment.
When I started out with experimenting with AI imaging, not long ago, I found out very fast that I wanted to do things differently. The best way to do that is with real-time AI image generators.
Using real-time you can see the results straight away and you have to be careful to capture the right moment because you get hundreds of different results with one stroke (using draw-to-image) or with one word (text-to-image) or even with changing the background colour.
When using a combination of draw and text it's even more complicated to catch the right moment.
Sound design & AI imaging
As a electronic musician I a huge comparison with designing sounds on a synthesizer or with audio samples.
When you turn a knop on a synth you will experience "hot spots" where the sound is just amazing, a tiny turn in one or other direction will change the sound.
With sounds you can always turn it back to where it sounded good.
With AI imaging (especially real-time) you are not always able to catch the same moment again. If you "turn the knop" a little bit too much you might not ever see what you saw again. That's the magic and the beautiful thing about AI imaging. There is no "undo" (at least not yet)
As a electronic musician I a huge comparison with designing sounds on a synthesizer or with audio samples.
When you turn a knop on a synth you will experience "hot spots" where the sound is just amazing, a tiny turn in one or other direction will change the sound.
With sounds you can always turn it back to where it sounded good.
With AI imaging (especially real-time) you are not always able to catch the same moment again. If you "turn the knop" a little bit too much you might not ever see what you saw again. That's the magic and the beautiful thing about AI imaging. There is no "undo" (at least not yet)