More than images, ideas

- Posted in D&D by - Permalink

Recently I played quite a bit with Stable Diffusion, a program for generating images from text, and it's amazing.
I'm not going to try to show here some unmatched ability (that I don't have) to generate extraordinary images, the Internet is full of tutorials on the subject (I recommend for example Sebastian Kamph's YouTube channel, he is both talented and educational).
However, let's talk about the unexpected fact that these images ... stimulate my imagination.
Indeed, in order to illustrate in an original way the textual descriptions of my imaginary world of Gilianar, I played with Stable Diffusion and besides the quality of the images produced, I discovered with surprise how this tool gave me new ideas.
Let me explain.
Let's say I want an image of a dragon perched on an old tower. With the following prompt

ancient yellow and green dragon with a large wingspan perched on an old broken stone tower

I get this for example:
enter image description here
Not bad for a start.
Stable Diffusion's modus operandi is to generate a lot of images, then once you like one of them, to modify it in a loop until you get a satisfactory result.
So let's modify it, but this time starting not from the textual description of the beginning, but from the image above (yes, Stable Diffusion is amazing, I already said it).
By playing with the enigmatic parameter Denoising strength, one introduce more or less chaos in the following images and so that's where magic happens, it's as if a part of a story was written without us.
After a few generations, an image clicks in my head.
"Oh yeah, that's cool, it looks like a forgotten tomb, let's keep this one!"
enter image description here
So much for the grave, now it looks more like she has boobs and she is instead near the entrance to her nest, on which she watches fiercely.
What if she protects her eggs? Deal!
A few random images later with guarding her eggs added to the description, this one fits my mood:
enter image description here
Definitely a good start for a place and the history that goes with it!

Thank you Stable Diffusion, I was just looking for original images to illustrate my texts, but I actually found more than that, now I own an iterative idea machine!