I notice you never go into detail about the prompts,models or tools you use is this intentional?
Well, it's not intentional because I'd argue that assessment isn't correct. Go through my backlog and check under the folds.
But to address in general:
I don't think my tool sets are particularly mysterious, a handful of background removers, upscalers, and face-mod tools on huggingface, Midjourney for most of my direct image-gen, occasionally Dall-E3, ancient versions of photoshop, audition, and premiere, Suno (with audio remastering from bandcamp) for most of my music gen, and for video I mainly use Vidu and occasionally MinMax/HaiLuo (still not sure which one's the company and which one's the generator there).
When it comes down to most stuff I'm showing off there usually isn't a prompt, there's bunches, with the prompt changing as I iterate, as I inpaint, as I composite multiple images together, use others as character references, style references, etc.
At that point any single prompt isn't going to be representative. I don't run a local Stable Diffusion install or the like so I can't really go into models much more than indicating whether I've used Midjourney #6.1 or Niji-6. My prompts tend to be big, at least a full paragraph long, and quickly fill up a tumblr post.
For music and videos you don't just have to deal with a huge prompt or three, but very involved processes.
Each one of those little boxes is a clip or a merged sequence of clips that went into my Open Letter to the SCP Foundation video, each of which started with at least one image made of one of more prompts and manual editing, combined with the video prompts that went along with the starting frame and reference-to-video posts, which is then combined with a manually edited and refined soundtrack that was made using multiple suno passes and SFX elements added in post.
I don't think a novella of prompt information for my goofy 3 minute long comedy song is of interest to enough people to be worth spending all the time compiling it.
Especially since even the song was typically generated in chunks with both lyric-prompt and prompt-prompt changes at every stage, then remastered inside suno with another prompt entirely, and then covered, re-extended, etc, with dozens upon dozens of false starts and scrapped verses.
I left the specific prompts off a few of my recent Rom video tutorials because my focus was more on the general process and my thoughts around the creative exercise under it, but most of my blog's front page is tutorials right now, and my image posts almost always have full prompts.
















