here are some pics from google. anyone who raised a kid or was a kid knows what I Spy books are. :)

I wanted to have the prompt: “A page from an I Spy book about ____” work since it would make totally epic pages and could just switch in different topics and wow. But Perchance has no idea what I Spy books are. Does anyone else’s ai know what I Spy books are?

  • Cavendish@lemmynsfw.com
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    5 days ago

    My ComfyUI/Flux setup didn’t know what to do with “page from an I Spy book.” Best I could do was have ChatGPT give me a detailed description of the scene and all the junk, then feed that whole thing in as a prompt.


    prompt

    Imagine a wide tabletop scene arranged like a child’s secret treasure collection, bathed in soft, even daylight from a nearby window. The surface is a worn, honey-colored wooden table, textured with scratches and faint paint stains. Every inch is covered with small, real-world objects placed in deliberate, artful disorder. There are old marbles, brass keys, seashells, dice, buttons, coins, puzzle pieces, stamps, tiny animal figurines, bits of ribbon, a magnifying glass, and the corner of an open book with yellowed pages. A glass jar half full of sand sits near the center, with a toy sailboat perched beside it. To one side lies a tangle of string and a pocket watch with its lid open. The lighting is bright but diffused, creating crisp, shadow-free focus across the whole composition. Every object appears tactile, polished, and color-saturated — vivid reds, deep blues, and aged metallic tones all balanced together in a nostalgic still life.

    In the background, a faint hint of a patterned wallpaper and the blurred outline of a wooden chair add depth, but the focus stays entirely on the tabletop clutter. The scene feels frozen in time — as if someone was just here, gathering their favorite trinkets for display.


    prompt

    Picture a cluttered wooden workbench inside a lakeside boathouse, lit by the soft golden glow of afternoon sun filtering through dusty windows. The entire tabletop is scattered with vintage fishing gear — a half-open tackle box overflowing with colorful lures, tangled lines, cork bobbers, hooks, and shiny sinkers. A faded map of the lake is spread beneath everything, its edges curling up where a reel and a folding knife hold it in place. A pair of weathered leather gloves rest near a coffee mug stained with dark rings. Beside it, a small jar of earthworms sits open, and a few have escaped onto the wood. There’s an old photograph of a proud fisherman with his catch tucked halfway under a spool of thread, and a cracked glass bottle containing a single feather lure floating inside.

    The light in the room feels nostalgic and serene, glowing through the window’s thin curtains and glinting off the metal tackle. Shadows are soft and long, catching on the ridges of a carved wooden fish that leans against a pile of coiled rope. In the background, you can make out blurred shelves lined with jars, an oar leaning against the wall, and the suggestion of rippling water beyond the window. Every object feels like a story from summers long past, perfectly arranged in the timeless, hyper-detailed realism of an I Spy tableau.