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 translating them into paper‑art construction, without altering proportions or expression. Maintain the same haircut, hair volume and hair direction from the uploaded photo, reimagined as sculpted layers and strips of paper that still follow the real hairstyle.
Create a highly detailed macro photograph of an intricately crafted paper art illustration, mimicking quilling, folding and paper sculpture techniques. It should look like a real physical paper artwork shot in extreme close‑up, with visible paper fibers, cut edges and layered depth.
Depict the person’s face rendered identically to the attached photo, but built from paper elements and filled with paper flowers of various colors and sizes integrated around and within the facial silhouette. Use curled quilling strips, folded petals and layered paper blossoms to construct the facial contours and surrounding decoration, while keeping my likeness perfectly recognizable.
The background should be a mosaic of dark blue, teal and green paper waves, made from layered, curved paper strips and panels that create flowing motion and depth. All elements must have tangible physical texture, deep shadows between layers and strong three‑dimensional relief, as if lit in a small studio with soft but directional lighting.
The overall result should feel like a premium macro product photo of a handcrafted paper sculpture portrait: crisp focus, rich texture, high detail and a polished, gallery‑quality aesthetic. Always keep the original face and hair identity from my uploaded photo with maximum fidelity, only changing the medium to quilled and sculpted paper, never changing who the person is.