| ▲ | runarberg 3 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
I mean: https://imgur.com/a/BYikxEI The difference is very stark: - The AI has a hard time making the geometric shapes regular. You see the stars have different size arms at different intervals in the AI version. This will take a human artist longer time to make it look worse. - The 5-point stars are still a little rounded in the AI version. - There is way too much text in the AI version (a human designer might make that mistake, but it is very typical of AI). - The orange 10 point star in the right with the text “you are the star” still has a gradient (AI really can’t help it self). - The borders around the title text “Karaoke night!” bleed into the borders of the orange (gradient) 10-point star on the right, but only half way. This is very sloppy, a human designer would fix that. - The font face is not Milky Boba but some sort of an AI hybrid of Milky Boba, Boba Milky and comic sans. - And finally, the QR code has obvious AI artifacts in them. Point I’m making, it is very hard to prompt your way out of making a poster look like AI, especially when the design is intentional in making it not look like AI. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | dpark 2 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I hear what you’re saying and at the same time I don’t agree with some of your criticisms. The gradient, yep, it slipped one in. The imperfect stars? I have seen artists do this forever, presumably intentional flair. The few real “glitches” would be trivial to fix in Photoshop. But they are very different certainly. ChatGPT generated a poster with a very sleek, “produced” style that apes corporate posters whereas you went with a much more personal touch. You are correct that yours does not look like typical AI. My point is certainly not that the AI poster is better, only that it’s capable of producing surprising results. With minimal guidance it can also generate different styles: https://imgur.com/a/zXfOZaf I think the trend to intentionally make stuff look “non-AI” is doomed to fail as AI gets better and better. A year or two ago the poster would have been full of nonsense letters. > And finally, the QR code has obvious AI artifacts in them. I wonder if this is intentional, to prevent AI from regurgitating someone’s real QR codes. ETA: Actually, I wonder how much of the “flair” on human-drawn stars is to avoid looking like they are drag-and-drop from a program like Word. Ironic if we’ve circled back around to stars that look perfect to avoid looking like a different computer generated star. | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||