Alphonse Mucha was a Czech Art Nouveau artist and designer known for his distinctive style, characterized by intricate and ornamental compositions, flowing lines, and decorative motifs.
Mucha's artwork often featured elegant women adorned with intricate patterns and flowing hair, surrounded by botanical elements and symbolic imagery. His illustrations became iconic representations of the Art Nouveau movement, which emerged in the late 19th century as a reaction against the industrialization and mass production of the time.
One of Mucha's most famous series is "The Seasons," which consists of four decorative panels representing spring, summer, autumn, and winter. These panels showcase Mucha's meticulous attention to detail, his ability to capture the beauty of nature, and his talent for blending decorative elements with symbolic imagery.
Mucha's work extended beyond illustrations and paintings. He also designed posters, advertisements, jewelry, furniture, and even theater sets, embracing a holistic approach to art and design. His designs often incorporated flowing lines, organic forms, and intricate patterns, creating a harmonious and visually captivating aesthetic.
Mucha's style was influenced by various artistic movements, including the Pre-Raphaelites, Japanese woodblock prints, and Byzantine art. He sought to create a sense of unity between art and life, combining aesthetics with a spiritual and philosophical approach.
Alphonse Mucha's legacy extends far beyond his own time. His artwork continues to be celebrated for its beauty, elegance, and influence on subsequent generations of artists and designers. Mucha's dedication to aesthetics, craftsmanship, and his ability to capture the essence of the Art Nouveau movement have firmly established him as one of the most iconic figures of this artistic era.
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Comments (9)
So glad to see you posting new loras, yours have been some of my favorite style loras in the past. I hope you're well!
Sigh. Another style LoRA rendered mediocre by poor captioning technique and/or undertraining.
It appears that this was trained using captions that incorporated too much of the actual style information. Therefore, if you don't include the style information in your prompt, you won't get the full effect. Just using the trigger listed will give you half-baked results at best. And, unfortunately, the model description is just information on Mucha, not information on how to get the best outputs.
Additionally, if you go look at Mucha's work, you'll see that the results of this LoRA have only a partial resemblance.
Yes, the dataset uses the author's original work, and he drew posters for the products, which contained the text.
You can process the dataset, remove all signatures, but in this case the originality of the author will disappear.
@Kappa_Neuro That's not remotely what I'm suggesting. I'm saying that the captions you wrote for the training included text describing the style, this does the opposite of preserving it. When you include something in the caption, the model learns that aspect less effectively and/or now requires that same text to appear in you prompt.
For example if you were training a psychedelic style that involves vibrant colors, but you put "vibrant colors" in the caption for every image, the resulting LoRA will be less likely to include vibrant colors in the output unless you include the phrase "vibrant colors" in your prompt.
I just recently collaborated on a second version of the Tres Riches Heures LoRA, and all I did was include the trigger word in the caption--that's it. And the results were better than long captions.
@RudyBaga Yes, you are right! The dataset had captions about styles. I'll try to teach you without describing the style.
@RudyBaga I've redesigned LoRA.
More precisely, even LoKR, it is better suited for stylization training.
Your recommendations for prompt were also taken into account.
I also think that Flux Dev base is pretty bad at art styles for the average user compared to SDXL.
My Artful Flux merge https://civitai.com/models/686814?modelVersionId=1001176 (along with a good prompt from Claude,ai) gives results much closer to Alphonse Mucha Style.
@J1B Did you wholly replace the file? I don't see a new version so I'm assuming you didn't reversion it?
And I have to respectfully disagree on flux, at least when it comes to training LoRAs. I've yet to see any other models that picks up styles as easily with little to no captioning.
@RudyBaga In order not to add a caption at all, you need a large dataset, and the artist does not have so many works.
Yes, I replaced the file.
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