New Add more details to the pony
Description
New release and testing, tell me in the comments
FAQ
Comments (7)
I downloaded and ran against some of my standard test prompts for several Pony offshoots at strength 1, no trigger word (your example image doesn't include that either, if it's not necessary then I would keep it that way since I think it's generally better for detail LoRAs to not require them if possible).
Pros:
- It did increase the level of detail as expected. This was especially noticeable on the realistic models
- It didn't impact the art style
Cons:
- It had a strong impact on composition. This was most noticeable in that it pulled subjects closer to the camera if they weren't already in cowboy-shot range or closer. It also tended to reduce the number of subjects in group shots.
Neutral:
- It tended to make images brighter, more colorful, and more saturated. This was fine for daytime shots since it made them "pop" and look nicer, but it hurt nighttime shots and some winter shots by adding color where it wasn't needed.
I would be happy to submit your reference for the model, this is a beta version, I will add these things in the next version, I hope you publish your work for the model on the page ،Thanks for your suggestion.
@Magof I'll see what I can do - the original grid was 12x13 images and 230 MB 😅. I'll put together a smaller sample and post it.
Edit: Posted sample here:
Downloaded the file and placed in the lora folder but it isn't showing up in my list of loras.
true, if i put it in models\Stable-diffusion i see it, but no chance to use it... lmao
do you will fix it? or maybe you uploaded wrong data? :3
As others have stated (without any response...), the lora simpley doesn`t show up in the list. I think you can manually activate the lora with "<lora:checkpoint-e18_s342:1>, Details extra++", at least it doesn`t throw up a "lora not found" message, but it would be nice to get some sort of conformation, since the prompt on your example picture doesn`t use the lora activator, or prompt activator.
