(OneViolentGentleman) (2025)

Image description: A woolly mammoth stands amid a dramatic, snow-covered mountain landscape. Towering rock formations create a narrow canyon with a small stream winding through its center. Sparse evergreen trees cling to the rocky slopes, and a few birds soar in the distant sky.

Full Generation Parameters:

romanticism, grand oil painting on canvas, traditional media, masterful brushwork and luminous colors, evoking a sense of awe and grandeur, a prehistoric ice age valley, towering snow-covered cliffs with cascading frozen waterfalls, their jagged icicles glistening in the golden glow of the setting sun, a mighty woolly mammoth with majestic, symmetrical tusks roams in the middle ground, leaving tracks in the snow behind, it is bathed in warm light, its thick fur illuminated with a soft radiance, its massive curved tusks gleaming as it gazes into the distance, steam rising from its breath in the cold air, in the foreground, a partially frozen, narrow river winds through the snowy landscape, patches of ice and dark stones breaking the surface, reflecting the interplay of fire and ice, the golden sunlight dances upon the icy waters, contrasting against the deep blues of the snow and shadows, icy mist swirls over the top of the cliffs, adding depth and atmosphere, the background features a vast, wintry expanse fading into a hazy glow, distant peaks shrouded in mist, birds soaring high in the crisp air, enhancing the sense of scale and untamed wilderness, rich, painterly textures, the fine detailing of the mammoth’s fur and the rugged cliffs, dramatic lighting that captures the sublime beauty of nature’s extremes, a composition balanced between warmth and cold, life and stillness, a breathtaking homage to the lost world of the pleistocene, oil on canvas with impasto highlights, deep atmospheric perspective, reminiscent of the great landscape painters of the 19th century, ovg, famous artwork inspired by caspar david friedrich and carl spitzweg, <lora:style-caspar_david_friedrich-flux-by_tiberiana:0.8> <lora:style-carl_spitzweg-flux-by_tangbohu:0.68>

Steps: 60, CFG scale: 1, Sampler: LMS, Seed: 88888888, RNG: CPU, Size: 960x1280, Model: artsy_vibe-flux-fp8, Version: f2.0.1v1.10.1-previous-659-gc055f2d43, Module 1: ae, Module 2: clip_l-clip_g-fp32-full_zer0int, Module 3: t5xxl_fp16, Model hash: d5894b84fa, Hires steps: 36, Hires upscale: 2, Schedule type: Beta, Hires Module 1: Use same choices, Hires upscaler: 4x_foolhardy_remacri, Hires CFG Scale: 1, Beta schedule beta: 0.6, Denoising strength: 0.36, Beta schedule alpha: 0.6, Distilled CFG Scale: 4.6, Diffusion in Low Bits: Automatic (fp16 LoRA), Hires Distilled CFG Scale: 4.6

  • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍
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    18 days ago

    So, I came to ask whether that is really prehistory, given that we have cave paintings of wooly mammoths. So I looked it up, and prehistory is anything before the first known structured writing system, and cave art and bone carvings don’t count.

    So, TIL.

    • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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      8 days ago

      I mean, words are defined based on how people use them, they don’t have precise objective definitions like that. Words are messy, subjective, and the meaning is dependent on the context and culture it’s being used in. I’m sure in some academic contexts that is the accurate definition, but there will also be cultures and contexts where your original intuition about the meaning was correct.

      • 𝕽𝖚𝖆𝖎𝖉𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖌𝖍
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        7 days ago

        Naw, my gut instinct was just straight up wrong, dog. It’s Ok. It’s neither the first, nor the last, time I’m going to be wrong. It’s good, because it means I sometimes verify before making claims.

        But I appreciate the spirit of your attempt to make me look less ignorant.

        Doveryay, no proveryay.