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Semih Kışlar

@semihkislar

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Joined 2 days ago
Pitchside Tunnel Moment with Your Favorite Footballer
Image

Upload your photo, type the footballer’s name, and choose a team for the jersey they hold. The scene is generated in front of the stands filled with the footballer’s supporters, while the held jersey stays consistent with your selected team’s official colors and design.

Inputs

Reference 1: User’s uploaded photo

Reference 2: [FOOTBALLER_NAME]

[JERSEY_NUMBER]

[JERSEY_TEAM_NAME] (team of the jersey being held)

[USER_OUTFIT_DESC]

[MOOD]

Prompt
Create a photorealistic image of the person from the user’s uploaded photo standing next to [FOOTBALLER_NAME] pitchside in front of the stadium stands, posing for a photo.

Location: Pitchside/touchline in a large stadium. Natural grass and advertising boards look realistic.

Stands: The background stands must feel 100% like [FOOTBALLER_NAME]’s team home crowd (single-team atmosphere). Dominant team colors, scarves, flags, and banners. No rival-team colors or mixed sections visible.

Composition: Both subjects centered, shoulder to shoulder. [FOOTBALLER_NAME] can place one arm around the user.

Prop: They are holding a jersey together toward the camera. The back of the jersey must clearly show [FOOTBALLER_NAME] and the number [JERSEY_NUMBER]. Print alignment is clean, sharp, and realistic.

Critical rule (lock the held jersey to a specific team)

The jersey they are holding must be an official kit design of [JERSEY_TEAM_NAME].

Keep the jersey colors, patterns, and overall design consistent with [JERSEY_TEAM_NAME].

If the kit normally includes a crest and sponsor, place them naturally and realistically (no distorted logos or random text).

Prevent color drift: the jersey’s primary and secondary colors must stay true to [JERSEY_TEAM_NAME]’s known colors.

Note: [JERSEY_TEAM_NAME] must not be the club [FOOTBALLER_NAME] currently plays for.

Clothing:

[FOOTBALLER_NAME]: Wearing his current team’s match kit (shirt, shorts, socks), looks natural and accurate.

User: [USER_OUTFIT_DESC]

Camera: Eye level, 35mm, slight wide angle, natural depth of field. Focus on the two people, background slightly blurred.

Lighting: Stadium lighting + daylight (or evening match lights), realistic shadows, natural skin tones.

Faces: Keep the user’s face and identity faithful to the uploaded reference. [FOOTBALLER_NAME] is clearly recognizable. Expression: [MOOD]

Quality: Ultra realistic, natural skin texture and fabric texture, high resolution.

Negative prompts
Wrong team colors on the held jersey, random or broken logos/text, unreadable name/number, extra limbs/fingers, facial distortion, watermark, heavy blur, duplicated crowd faces, oversharpening.

Output
Single image, 3:2 landscape or 1:1 square, high resolution.
21 day ago
Director Variation Grid: One Still, Eight Auteur Re-Shoots
Image

Lock your original film still in the center tile as ORIGINAL, untouched, then re-shoot the exact same scene through the visual language of eight legendary directors. This 3x3 grid template enforces clean alignment, consistent labels, and strong director-specific cinematography (framing, lens feel, lighting, color grading, texture, mood). It also includes an Identity + Gender Lock so multi-character scenes stay consistent, preventing cast drift, face swaps, or gender changes across tiles.

Create a single 3x3 grid image (square, 2048x2048, high detail).
The center tile (row 2, col 2) must be the exact uploaded reference film still, unchanged. Do not reinterpret, repaint, relight, recolor, crop, reframe, stylize, sharpen, blur, or transform it in any way. It must remain exactly as provided.

Director detection rule
If the director of the uploaded film still is one of the 8 directors listed below, then the tile for that same director must be an exact duplicate of the ORIGINAL center tile, with no changes at all (same image content, same framing, same colors, same lighting, same texture). Only apply the label.
All other tiles follow the normal re-shoot rules.

Grid rules
9 equal tiles in a clean 3x3 layout, thin uniform gutters between tiles.
Each tile has a simple, readable label in the top-left corner, consistent font and size, high contrast, no warping.
Center tile label: ORIGINAL
Other tiles labels exactly:
Alfred Hitchcock
Akira Kurosawa
Federico Fellini
Andrei Tarkovsky
Ingmar Bergman
Jean-Luc Godard
Agnès Varda
Sergio Leone
No other text, logos, subtitles, or watermarks.
Keep the 3x3 alignment perfectly straight and clean.

IDENTITY + GENDER LOCK (applies to ALL non-ORIGINAL tiles)
- Use the ORIGINAL center tile as the single source of truth for every person’s identity.
- Preserve the exact number of people and their roles/positions (no swapping who is who).
- Do NOT change any person’s gender or gender presentation. No gender swap, no sex change, no cross-casting.
- Keep each person’s key identity traits consistent: face structure, hairstyle length/type, facial hair (must NOT appear/disappear), makeup level (must NOT appear/disappear), body proportions, age range, skin tone, and distinctive features (moles/scars/glasses).
- Do not turn one person into a different person. Do not merge faces. Do not split one person into two. Do not duplicate the same face across different people.
- If any identity attribute is ambiguous, default to matching the ORIGINAL exactly.
- Allowed changes are ONLY cinematic treatment per director: framing, lens feel, camera height, DOF, lighting, palette, contrast curve, texture, mood, and set emphasis. Identities must remain locked.
NEGATIVE: gender swap, femininize/masculinize, add/remove beard, add/remove lipstick, change hair length drastically, face replacement, identity drift.

CAST ANCHORING
- Person A = left-most person in ORIGINAL, Person B = right-most person in ORIGINAL, Person C = center/back person in ORIGINAL, etc.
- Each tile must keep Person A/B/C as the same individuals (same gender presentation and identity), only reshot cinematically.

Content rules (for non-duplicate tiles)
Maintain recognizable continuity across all tiles (who/where/what). Do not change identities into different people.
Vary per director: framing, lens feel, camera height, depth of field, lighting, color palette, contrast curve, texture, production design emphasis, mood.
Ultra-sharp cinematic stills (except where diffusion is specified), coherent lighting, correct anatomy, no duplicated faces, no mangled hands, no broken perspective, no glitch artifacts, and perfectly readable labels.

Director-specific style and color grading (apply strongly per tile, unless the duplicate rule applies)

Alfred Hitchcock
Palette: muted neutrals, cool grays, sickly greens, deep blacks, occasional saturated red accent.
Contrast: high contrast with crisp, suspenseful shadows.
Texture: classic 35mm cleanliness with tense atmosphere.
Lens/DOF: 35–50mm, controlled depth, precise geometry.
Lighting/Blocking: noir-influenced practicals, hard key, voyeuristic framing, psychological tension.

Akira Kurosawa
Palette: earthy desaturated browns/greens; restrained primaries if color.
Contrast: bold tonal separation, punchy blacks.
Texture: gritty film grain, tactile elements (mud, rain, wind).
Lens/DOF: 24–50mm with deep focus; dynamic staging and strong geometry.
Lighting/Atmosphere: dramatic natural light, weather as design (fog, rain streaks, backlight).

Federico Fellini
Palette: warm ambers, carnival reds, creamy highlights, pastel accents.
Contrast: medium contrast, dreamy glow and gentle bloom.
Texture: soft diffusion, theatrical surreal polish.
Lens/DOF: normal to wide, staged tableaux, rich background set dressing.
Lighting: expressive, stage-like, whimsical yet melancholic mood.

Andrei Tarkovsky
Palette: subdued sepia/olive, cold cyan-gray, low saturation, weathered tones.
Contrast: low-to-medium, soft highlight roll-off.
Texture: organic grain, misty air, water stains, aged surfaces.
Lens/DOF: 50–85mm, contemplative framing, naturalistic DOF.
Lighting/Atmosphere: window light, overcast feel, poetic elements (fog, rain, smoke), quiet intensity.

Ingmar Bergman
Palette: near-monochrome restraint, cold grays, pale skin tones, minimal color distractions.
Contrast: high contrast, sculpted faces, deep shadows.
Texture: clean, intimate, psychologically focused.
Lens/DOF: 50–85mm, tighter framing, shallow-to-medium DOF.
Lighting: strong key with dramatic falloff, emotionally intense portraits.

Jean-Luc Godard
Palette: bold primaries (red/blue/yellow) punctuating neutrals, or intentionally flat natural colors.
Contrast: medium contrast, occasional slightly overexposed highlights.
Texture: raw 16mm/35mm energy, imperfect and alive.
Lens/DOF: wider lenses, spontaneous off-center composition.
Lighting: available light feel, street/neon/practicals, documentary new-wave immediacy.

Agnès Varda
Palette: warm natural daylight, gentle pastels, honest skin tones, subtle complementary colors.
Contrast: medium, soft and inviting.
Texture: tactile lived-in realism, subtle film grain.
Lens/DOF: 28–50mm, environmental portrait framing with context.
Lighting: naturalistic, human-first, intimate but open atmosphere.

Sergio Leone
Palette: sunbaked golds, dusty oranges, sepia browns, deep shadows, occasional turquoise sky tones.
Contrast: high contrast, harsh sun, strong silhouettes.
Texture: gritty dust, sweat, leather, weathered surfaces, pronounced grain.
Lens/DOF: extreme wide (24–35mm) and extreme close-up language; shallow DOF for eyes/details.
Lighting/Mood: hard sunlight, rim light, operatic tension, iconic dramatic shadow shapes.

Output: a single final 3x3 grid image only.
51 day ago
I acknowledge your request and am prepared to support you in drafting a comprehensive Product Requirements Document (PRD). Once you share a specific subject, feature, or development initiative, I will assist in developing the PRD using a structured format that includes: Subject, Introduction, Problem Statement, Goals and Objectives, User Stories, Technical Requirements, Benefits, KPIs, Development Risks, and Conclusion. Until a clear topic is provided, no PRD will be initiated. Please let me know the subject you'd like to proceed with, and I’ll take it from there.
12 days ago