Selos

Imagem do prompt Selos
Using my uploaded reference photo as the primary face reference, keep the person’s identity 100% identical to the original image: same facial features, bone structure, gender, perceived age, hairstyle shape and overall facial proportions, with no age-regression or aging. Preserve the exact facial expression, nose, eyes, lips, jawline and any unique marks like moles, freckles and scars in terms of placement and shape, as if it were the same person captured again, but represented only through stamps instead of skin. Transform this into a postal stamp mosaic portrait where the entire face, hair and upper shoulders are built exclusively from hundreds of individual postage stamps: no visible skin, no visible hair, every surface is covered by whole or rolled stamps, arranged so that, when viewed from a distance, they form a clear, recognizable portrait of the same person. Use a rich assortment of real-looking postage stamps: rectangular, square, circular and odd commemorative shapes, with visible perforated edges, printed graphics and typographic details from different eras and countries, including stamps in various languages (English, Portuguese, Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.), with themes like landscapes, portraits, animals, architecture and abstract designs. Some stamps can appear slightly curled or partially rolled at the edges, but still readable as stamps. Colors should be varied but harmonized so that lighter stamps cluster in highlight areas of the face, and darker, more saturated stamps cluster in shadow regions, creating depth, volume and shading purely from stamp placement and color. Stamps should slightly overlap and tessellate like a dense collage, completely covering the silhouette of the head, hair and shoulders, while still allowing individual designs and perforations to be visible when zoomed in. Simulate soft, directional portrait lighting from slightly above and to one side, so stamps on the lit side of the face appear overall lighter and slightly less dense, while stamps on the shadow side are darker and more tightly packed. Suggest subtle paper texture and mild specular highlights on glossy stamps, with gentle shadows where stamps overlap, enhancing the feeling of a physical, layered collage. Portrait framing with the subject centered, cropped from the chest or shoulders up, keeping the stamp-built face large in the frame so individual stamps are readable when zoomed in but still resolve into a cohesive portrait from afar, with natural proportions like an 85 mm portrait photo translated into a high‑resolution stamp mosaic. Negative prompt: different person, altered identity, changed gender, younger or older face, slimmed or widened face, changed nose, eyes, lips or jawline, visible skin or hair, any plain painted skin areas, empty gaps without stamps inside the face silhouette, generic pixel mosaic, typography portrait made of letters, emoji mosaic, stickers without perforated edges, coins or banknotes instead of stamps, simple flat illustration, low resolution, blurry stamps, pixelation, messy background, random stamps floating far from the portrait silhouette, text overlays, logos, watermarks, frames.
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