Of course, they ARE AI generated. But, still…
I wish I had taken a picture the day we went for an October drive in nearby Smicksburg, PA an Amish community. It was cool, cloudy, foggy, with light drizzle. We were driving random back roads and came across a card table at the base of a long driveway where a little Amish girl (9 or10) was by herself selling baked goods.
When I stopped, my gf irrationally objected. She got weird vibes from the entire situation. She asked me to keep going, but I thought that would be rude. I bought a small shoo-fly pie and some cookies (all wrapped in plastic). I tipped the girl and took my stuff back to the car. The girl never said a word, nor did she smile.
My gf swears to this day that the girl was a child-of-the-corn or something. She says the girl had solid black eyes. I think she was just introverted and Amish. And the road was seriously a back road, probably if five cars drove it that day it was a lot. Also, the little baked good treats really sucked!
Somehow arcane objects lose their eeriness when they’re mass produced out of plastic and plaster.
Are they really AI-generated images?
Bing AI has generated this from the prompt: “Imaginary pictures from an occult flea market.”
Count the fingers. Last I heard AI was still having trouble with hands.
New Bing AI prompt: “Photorealistic images from an occult flea market”:
They are tagged as AI art. Also, if you zoom in, you can see some of the ai artifacts.
However, that does work with the creepy theme.
Yes.
A little of the Uncanny Valley Effect.
They obviously used “Wes Anderson” in the prompts.
The art in generative AI art is coming up with the right prompts to get what you want.