Okay, let me walk you through something I fiddled with recently. It was one of those afternoons where I decided to mess around with some of the online AI image creation tools. Just wanted to see what they could really do, you know?

Getting Started
So, I fired up one of the popular AI art generators. Didn’t really have a grand plan, just curiosity. My first thought was to try and create an image of a supermodel, like you see in magazines. Pretty standard stuff.
I typed in a basic prompt, something like “photorealistic image of a high-fashion supermodel on a runway”. The results were okay, looked like models alright, but kind of generic. Standard poses, typical clothing.
Trying for Specifics
Then I thought, let’s see how specific I can get. I wanted to control the look more. So, I started adding details. Things like “wearing a red haute couture gown”, “dramatic lighting”, “Paris fashion week”. That helped refine the scene, made it look a bit more professional.
But then I decided to push it further, trying to get really specific with the physical look of the model. This is where things got tricky. I wanted a particular build, you know? Like, really specific proportions often seen in those over-the-top fashion shoots or fantasy styles. So I started tweaking the prompt to emphasize certain features.
Here’s where the trial and error really kicked in:

- I tried adding descriptive words about body shape. Stuff like “curvy figure” or “hourglass shape”. Sometimes it worked, sometimes the AI just ignored it or made things look weirdly distorted.
- I experimented with terms focusing on the upper body proportions. I used phrases trying to describe a very specific, you know, fullness or prominence in the chest area. Getting this right was tough. Often the AI would make the whole body strangely bulky, or the proportions would look completely unnatural, almost cartoonish.
- Adjusting the prompts felt like guesswork. Add one word, the whole image changes. Remove another, and it reverts back to something generic. I must have generated dozens of images.
Hitting Roadblocks
It felt like the AI tools had trouble balancing “supermodel” aesthetics (usually very tall and slender in AI interpretations) with descriptions asking for more pronounced curves, especially in the chest. It often defaulted to one extreme or the other, or just produced awkward results.
Sometimes the safety filters seemed to kick in too, even if I wasn’t trying for anything explicit. Just describing body shapes seemed to sometimes trigger warnings or refusals. Maybe the combination of “supermodel” and certain physical descriptions raised flags for the system. It was a bit frustrating, honestly, just trying to guide the tool to a specific visual outcome.
Final Thoughts
So, after spending a good chunk of time on it, I didn’t quite nail the exact image I had vaguely pictured in my head. The AI could do “supermodel” and it could sometimes do “specific body features”, but getting that precise combination, especially the very pronounced upper body I was trying to prompt for, in a way that looked realistic and matched the high-fashion vibe? That was harder than I thought.
It just shows these tools are still learning, I guess. They’re powerful for sure, but getting super specific, especially with human anatomy and tricky combinations of features, still takes a lot of fiddling and often doesn’t quite hit the mark. Just part of the process of figuring out what this tech can and can’t do right now.