Prompting takes practice and a solid grip on visual vocabulary. But it’s a skill to be able to produce valuable work that matches the stylistic aesthetic of a client. Iterate, tweak the prompt, iterate, tweak the prompt. You have to understand the engine, have to understand how to prompt, and have to be willing to iterate, iterate, iterate. It’s brought in a lot, a lot of work.īut here’s the thing, learning how to use these tools is a skill in and of itself. I use generative AI daily, and have gotten great results with it. I’m a art director/designer, and I also just graduated from an executive program at MIT for artificial intelligence. Somehow, I'm sure that there's a solution to your problem. Your case sounds pretty similar, except that you were able to actually catch those deficiencies before turning it in.ĭesigners have had to deal with hackneyed stock photography and not having budgets for illustrators for years and always somehow managed before AI. There was a big story a few months back about a lawyer using ChatGPT to write a legal brief for him, and it turned out that most/all of the previous cases that GPT cited weren't real cases, because that's not what GPT is designed to do. There is admittedly a lot of bullshit flying around about what AI is capable of right now, but it's no one's fault but your own if you believed the hype about it without doing any research on the actual functionality of the tools. And, hell, in a year or two, it probably will be usable for a lot of that stuff. Of course Adobe is going to be aspirational in how they bill their big marquee new product. "This just in, a company appears to be exaggerating how effective a product is in their advertising. Oh, BTW, I'm not an illustrator, so now I'm asking myself why the fuck I went down this road at all!!! Honestly, how are you supposed to use AI in a professional environment? I get that when you are just experimenting, or having a laugh, it's all good, but these companies are spending money of developing this shit (I presume they are at least, I don't know), and I'm sure someone somewhere is imagining that these tools are useful… but how the fuck do you use this shit in a professional setting? Yea, good luck trying to get AI to draw a kid in a turban, Jesus Fucking Christ, I guess I'll have to draw this too. They wanted me to switch a girl in the poster for someone with a turban, you know, for " diversity". I resided to the fact that I would have to DRAW THE FINGERS MY SELF! When I submitted the poster to the client, they had some changes (as they tend to do). I must have run through 100 iterations before it was clear to me that AI simply can not render fingers. First I selected the hands that looked like something from The Human Centipede's museum of Body Horror (three fingers (that looked like thumbs) on one hand were melted into 6 fingers (all middle fingers without finger nails) on the other). I uploaded my Text to Image picture, selected the area I wanted to correct, and I let Adobe's AI determine the rest. So to correct this I tried Adobe's Generative Fill. Oh plus there were other weird things, like a backpack with three straps(?!), hair that looks real, and even though the rest of the image looks illustrated(!). Once I chose the "best image" (not really, but how much time am I supposed to spend doing this?) there were many issues with it, like the people in the illustration had dead eyes, missing fingers, extra fingers, and fingers that seemed to be melted into each other (JFC). It took around 20 iterations (each iteration spits out 4 options) which means that AI gave me around 80 options for the visual I was asking for. A few days ago I decided to use Adobe's Text to Image AI to generate "the perfect image" for a poster mockup I made for work. Join our Discord server Design Subreddits LIST Please report any posts which break these rules, to maintain the quality of the subreddit. No Candid / Non-Consenting Explicit / Sensitive ContentĬontact / Engage Moderators Appropriatelyįor full explanation of the rules see here. Shared work must have a comment for context and use the green "Sharing Work" flair.
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