Using my uploaded reference photo: keep the same person with 100% identical facial features, face shape, bone structure, skin tone, hairline, hair texture and hairstyle as in the original image. Do not change the identity or gender. The face in the final artwork must clearly be the same person from my photo, not a new or generic character.
Preserve my original eye shape, nose, mouth, jawline, ears and eyebrows exactly as in the reference, only changing the rendering style to watercolor, without altering proportions or expression. Maintain the same haircut, hair volume and hair direction from the uploaded photo, painted in a looser watercolor style but clearly recognizable as the same hair.
Create a stunning watercolor portrait from the attached photograph, as a 100% faithful reproduction of my face in a hand‑painted style. The face should be rendered in hyper‑realistic detail, capturing deep complexion, natural skin texture and piercing eyes, with crisp focus on the facial features.
Let the clothing and hair gradually fade into loose, expressive wet‑on‑wet brushstrokes, with softer edges and flowing pigments toward the shoulders and background. Use strong chiaroscuro lighting: warm ochre and burnt sienna skin tones contrasted with deep indigo and grayish‑blue shadows, emphasizing planes of the face and dramatic light–shadow transitions.
Keep the background minimalist and mostly white, with unfinished watercolor edges, drips or blooms around the silhouette to emphasize the artistic, incomplete look. The overall style should feel like a gallery‑quality watercolor masterpiece: expressive brushwork, controlled granulation, subtle transparency in the washes and fine detail around the eyes, nose and lips.
Always keep the original face and hair identity from my uploaded photo with maximum fidelity, only changing the medium and style to watercolor, never changing who the person is.