Spaces:
Running
on
Zero
Running
on
Zero
adjusts flacon description
Browse files
app.py
CHANGED
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@@ -95,14 +95,17 @@ General Atmosphere:
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Summarize the fragrance’s evolution and overall emotional impression. Keep it artistic, connected to the real details of the scene, and avoid clichés.
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Image Description (for marketing visuals):
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Describe an imagined marketing image that captures the perfume’s essence. Begin
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Specify the typography style used on the label text, ensuring it reflects the perfume’s mood and story (for example, elegant script for romantic scents, bold sans-serif for modern ones, vintage serif for nostalgic fragrances).
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The bottle must occupy most of the image frame and appear in sharp focus and fine detail, shown from an angle or perspective that enhances its elegance and gives a refined, editorial feel — it does not have to be perfectly front-facing or centered.
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Optionally, include one or two small, natural ingredients (such as herbs, flowers, citrus slices, or spices) placed tastefully near the bottle to subtly evoke the fragrance’s notes — these must remain minimal and never overpower the bottle.
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The background should be minimal, abstract, or atmospheric — such as gradients, soft light, fabric textures, or mist — with no depiction of people, animals, or narrative scenes.
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Use cinematic luxury advertising codes: refined shadows, soft directional lighting, elegant minimalism, and a sophisticated, editorial composition.
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---
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Always ensure that:
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– The fragrance matches the mood and visual setting of the scene
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| 95 |
Summarize the fragrance’s evolution and overall emotional impression. Keep it artistic, connected to the real details of the scene, and avoid clichés.
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| 96 |
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| 97 |
Image Description (for marketing visuals):
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| 98 |
+
Describe an imagined marketing image that captures the perfume’s essence. Begin by describing a clear, modern perfume bottle as the main and visually dominant subject.
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The bottle must be obviously recognizable as a perfume bottle — featuring a sprayer or atomizer, an elegant cap, and a refined fragrance label that displays the exact Perfume Name generated in this output.
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Describe the bottle’s shape, glass texture, and any subtle design details (like gentle engraving or embossing). Do not describe containers that look like liquor bottles, flower vases, or fantasy potion bottles.
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Do not add narrative illustrations, characters, or storytelling scenes on the bottle — only tasteful design elements that highlight luxury and elegance.
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Specify the typography style used on the label text, ensuring it reflects the perfume’s mood and story (for example, elegant script for romantic scents, bold sans-serif for modern ones, vintage serif for nostalgic fragrances).
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| 103 |
The bottle must occupy most of the image frame and appear in sharp focus and fine detail, shown from an angle or perspective that enhances its elegance and gives a refined, editorial feel — it does not have to be perfectly front-facing or centered.
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| 104 |
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Optionally, you may include one or two small, natural ingredients (such as herbs, flowers, citrus slices, or spices) placed tastefully near the bottle to subtly evoke the fragrance’s key notes — these must remain minimal and never overpower the bottle.
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| 105 |
The background should be minimal, abstract, or atmospheric — such as gradients, soft light, fabric textures, or mist — with no depiction of people, animals, or narrative scenes.
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| 106 |
Use cinematic luxury advertising codes: refined shadows, soft directional lighting, elegant minimalism, and a sophisticated, editorial composition.
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---
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Always ensure that:
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– The fragrance matches the mood and visual setting of the scene
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