9_angulos_diferentes

Imagem do prompt 9_angulos_diferentes
Use the uploaded photo as the primary visual reference. The main person in the image must appear with 100% identical identity in all generated frames: same facial features and bone structure, same nose, eyes, lips, jawline, cheekbones, forehead, hairstyle shape and hairline, same gender and age impression. Do not change the gender or make the face younger or older. Preserve the exact facial expression, gaze direction and all unique details such as moles, freckles, scars, wrinkles and skin texture. The skin tone in the generated images must match the skin tone in the reference photo precisely, with the same overall contrast, highlight placement and color balance, so it feels like part of the same shoot. First, analyze the entire composition of the uploaded image: identify all key subjects present (person/people, vehicles, objects) and their spatial relationships and interactions, as well as the environment (interior or exterior, architecture, props, background depth). Recreate exactly these same subjects in the same environment and generate a cohesive contact‑sheet style layout: a 3x3 grid with 9 cinematic frames. All frames occur in the same location and time, with the same characters and props, but from different camera setups. The 9 frames should be realistic cinematic shots, each one clearly a different camera angle or framing, using standard film shot types adapted to the content: at least one wide establishing shot showing the full environment and subject placement; medium and medium‑close shots showing the main person and any other subjects interacting; close‑ups and extreme close‑ups emphasizing the main person’s face, hands, or key details/objects; over‑the‑shoulder or profile shots where appropriate, while keeping the same subjects and environment; if there are multiple people, keep the group or pair composition coherent and believable across angles. All 9 images must: preserve the main person’s identity exactly as in the photo, with consistent face, skin tone, hairstyle and expression family (small natural variations in micro‑expression are acceptable, but not a different person); keep clothing type, colors and materials consistent with the original image; maintain the same environment, props, furniture and background architecture, just seen from different angles or distances; use consistent color grading and visual “look” across the entire grid, replicating the mood and processing of the original photo (e.g., warm cinematic, cool teal‑orange, desaturated, etc.); avoid any AI artifacts such as duplicated limbs, warped faces, or inconsistent lighting across shots. Camera, lens and composition Generate a single vertical or horizontal contact‑sheet style image (depending on the original photo orientation) that contains a 3x3 grid of frames with thin, clean borders or subtle spacing between them. Use a virtual cinema camera with different focal lengths to mimic real filmmaking: wide shot(s) with ~24–35 mm equivalent; medium shots with ~35–50 mm; close‑ups with ~50–85 mm. Respect plausible perspective: the background and subject sizes must change realistically with the virtual focal length and camera distance, not just by cropping. Keep horizon lines and vanishing points consistent with the original environment. Each frame should be composed with clear subject focus (rule of thirds, leading lines, or centered composition) and natural headroom. Lighting and color Analyze the lighting in the original photo: direction of the key light, hardness/softness of shadows, color temperature, and any practical light sources in frame. Apply the same lighting setup across all 9 shots: same key light direction and color; same shadow depth and contrast; same balance between warm and cool tones; same intensity and placement of practical lights, window glow, neon, or ambient fill. Color grade all frames consistently to match the reference: same saturation level, contrast curve, and overall mood. Skin tones must remain natural and identical to the reference tone in every shot, adjusted only for angle and exposure changes that would occur in real cinematography. Style and technical details Photorealistic, cinematic look, high resolution (aim for 8K source detail across the grid, then scaled appropriately). Natural depth of field: wider shots with deeper focus, close‑ups with softer backgrounds, always plausible for the simulated focal length and aperture. No cartoon, anime, or painterly styles. The final result should look like a professional “cinematic contact sheet” captured on set: 9 different frames from the same scene, same cast, same location, same lighting, seen through different lenses. Negative prompt no change of identity, no different face, no wrong skin tone, no gender change, no age change, no beauty‑filter skin, no plastic or over‑smoothed skin, no cartoon, no anime, no illustration, no 3D render look, no unrealistic bokeh circles, no fisheye or extreme wide‑angle distortion, no impossible camera angles, no extra people or missing key subjects, no change of clothing color or environment layout, no mismatched color grading between frames, no text overlays, no logos, no watermarks, no heavy noise or pixelation, no motion blur on faces, no duplicated limbs or deformed hands, no inconsistent lighting direction from shot to shot.
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