[SD 2.0 768][TextualInversion]SoCalGuitarist Cinema768 Embeddings - Digital / Analog / Classic B&W - Easy movie scenes for 2.X Models! Cinema768-Digital
<p>These are another batch of <strong>high quality</strong> SD model 2.X embeddings that I am excited to release to the stable diffusion community! My new <strong>Cinema768</strong> embeddings deliver easy cinematic lighting, color grading and cinematography on-demand! Make imaginary movie scenes with a high degree of reliability and flexibility! I am also including my special negative embedding I use in all of my sample images, invoke it any time you want to boost the realism in your generations!</p><p>As with all my other <strong>high quality</strong> embeddings, you can mix and match to create unique and interesting novel art styles! Check out my <a href="https://civitai.com/models/1461/gta768-art-style-embedding-for-version-2x" rel="ugc" target="_blank">GTA768</a>, <a href="https://civitai.com/models/1305/sda768" rel="ugc" target="_blank">SDA768</a> and <a href="https://civitai.com/models/1288/inkpunk768" rel="ugc" target="_blank">Inkpunk768</a> embeddings for more great styles on demand!</p><p>--------</p><p><strong>To use these embeddings in AUTOMATIC1111, copy them to your embeddings folder in your stable-diffusion-webui directory. No need to restart, just invoke the embedding from your prompt. Make sure you are using a compatible model or you will get errors!</strong></p><p>--------</p><p>I've been more than a little jealous of all the really cool imaginary movie scenes the Midjourney folks have been making, so I was inspired to create an embedding that provides an easy cinematic style, color grading and "movie screen grab" look. I also wanted to try to capture the experience of a movie filmed on celluloid, along with the classic black and white cinema look. Through a lot of trial and error and token smithing, I believe I've come up with three really good embeddings that capture the spirit of that "Cinematic look" that Midjourney spits out so easily. Sorry they're so chonky, they're all in the 18 - 24 vector range - such is the nature if you want pretty things!</p><p><strong><u>Versions</u></strong></p><p><strong>Cinema768-Digital</strong> - Warm tones, cool contrasts, soft focus. Emphasis on cinematic lighting and color grading. Will produce "screen shot from a movie" type results with ease, even when prompted with as little as direction as "a coffee shop" (see sample photo). <strong>This embedding gives you the most modern cinematic look and style</strong></p><p><strong>Cinema768-Analog</strong> - Warm tones, cool contrast, slight film grain with some occasional film scratches. delivers a more vintage look. If you're trying to recreate the 80's sci-fi movie styles, this is the embedding to use. Pro-tip, if you're trying to get a particular style, reference the year in your prompt, i.e. "The Weeknd starring in a High Fantasy comedy Muppet movie in 1987" will give you more period correct costumes and add a bit more patina to the results.</p><p><strong>Cinema768-Classic</strong> - This embedding pushes hard towards black and white and vintage cinematography. Expect flatter backgrounds (soundstage style) and more dramatic lighting. One neat thing about this embedding is that even though it pushes the old school cinematic style, you can still give it modern topics and it'll work. One thing to note, sometimes color will leak through (typically red lips), you can force black and white just by adding "color" and "colorized" to your negative prompts.</p><p><strong>Cinema768-BW </strong>- This is a modified version of my Cinema768-Classic Embedding that really forces the black and white look. It targets the early 20th century "Talkies" era of black and white film from the 20's to the late 50's. Expect contrast to be kinda all over the place, that's by design. This is still a very flexible embedding, so make sure you prompt period correct clothing and props. Check out the sample photos for some examples on how to force period styles.</p><p><br /></p><p><strong>Cinema768-SilentFilm </strong>- This embedding takes my black and white embedding and rubs dirt and scratches and burns and all sorts of crap all over the film. Expect crazy contrasts, smeary blacks and overall exactly what you would expect from 130 year old footage. An unfortunate side effect of this embedding is you will occasionally get "torn photograph" style output, with creases and torn edges like old tintype photos. </p><p><strong>no_unrealistic768 </strong>- This is an optional <strong><u>NEGATIVE EMBEDDING</u></strong> that I use for all of my sample images on this page. Add this embedding to your embeddings directory just like normal, however invoke it from your negative prompt. It forces realism and better lighting into images. The change is subtle, but noticeable. Use this instead of the big mess of negative words you normally add for negative prompts. <strong>NOTE</strong> - This embedding suppresses cartoon/drawing/inked styles, only use this for when you are trying to achieve photorealism.<strong> </strong></p><p>I'm considering also doing a some other variants as well. If you are interested in a <u>silent movie version</u>, please leave a comment and let me know.!</p><p>??I hope you enjoy using these embeddings in your art as much as I enjoy creating them for the Stable Diffusion community. ????If you do like them, can you pretty please <u>click the heart</u> at the top and leave a review? Many thanks! ??</p>
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