Placeholder: Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Edvard Munch, Max Ernst Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Edvard Munch, Max Ernst

@Mabaaigen

Prompt

Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Edvard Munch, Max Ernst

Abstract, two heads, blurry, deformed, disfigured, cartoon, nsfw ,framed, low res, ugly, bad anatomy, deformed body, missing fingers, blurry, deformed face, cropped, cropped face, conjoined twins, image, weird eyes, worst quality, low quality, watermark

1 year ago

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Model

SDXL

Guidance Scale

20

Dimensions

4096 × 4096

Similar

Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Edvard Munch
Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Yves Tanguy
For The Eye of Silence Max Ernst employed a technique called decalcomania to create arbitrary textures on the canvas, which he then reworked to resemble rock formations and forms of animals, plants.cThe imagery on the surrealist canvas has been described as a primordial-like landscape. The Eye of Silence has also been described as, "part vegetation, part rock and part bejewelled
For The Eyes of Silence Max Ernst employed a technique called decalcomania to create arbitrary textures on the canvas, which he then reworked to resemble rock formations and forms of animals, plants. a primordial-like "part vegetation, part rock and part bejewelled
Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Edvard Munch, Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy
Sublime nature, Henri Rousseau, hyperrealistic, hypnotic, obsessive, real world
For The Eyes of Silence Max Ernst employed a technique called decalcomania to create arbitrary textures on the canvas, which he then reworked to resemble rock formations and forms of animals, plants. a primordial-like "part vegetation, part rock and part bejewelled
A marvelous landscape, trees, flowers, sun, intricate, Henri Rousseau, Max Ernst, thoughtful, interesting, a bit appalling
Intricate patterns on a forest landscape, sinister scribbles, pastel colors, Max Ernst
For The Eyes of Silence Max Ernst employed a technique called decalcomania to create arbitrary textures on the canvas, which he then reworked to resemble rock formations and forms of animals, plants. a primordial-like "part vegetation, part rock and part bejewelled
For The Eye of Silence Max Ernst employed a technique called decalcomania to create arbitrary textures on the canvas, which he then reworked to resemble rock formations and forms of animals, plants.cThe imagery on the surrealist canvas has been described as a primordial-like landscape. The Eye of Silence has also been described as, "part vegetation, part rock and part bejewelled
For The Eyes of Silence Max Ernst employed a technique called decalcomania to create arbitrary textures on the canvas, which he then reworked to resemble rock formations and forms of animals, plants. a primordial-like "part vegetation, part rock and part bejewelled

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