Okay, here’s my attempt at writing a blog post in the style you described, focusing on LumaLabs prompt structure:
So, I’ve been messing around with LumaLabs, trying to get some decent-looking stuff, you know? And let me tell you, the prompt… it’s a thing. It’s not like some other AI things I’ve played with. You gotta be kinda specific, but not too specific. It’s a weird balance.
First, I started with just throwing random words at it. Like, “cat, flying, space, rainbow.” Yeah, that gave me… something. A mess, mostly. It was like the AI had a seizure and just threw colors at the screen. Definitely not what I was going for.
My Dumb Experiments
- Phase 1: Total garbage. Random words.
- Phase 2: Slightly less garbage. Added some adjectives.
- Phase 3: Okay, now we’re getting somewhere… kinda.
Then I tried being a bit more descriptive. “Fluffy cat flying through space with a rainbow trail.” Better, but still… off. The cat looked kinda melted, and the rainbow was more like a smear. It felt like I was giving it ideas, but it didn’t know how to put them together properly.
After that,I scrolled through some LumaLabs examples. I noticed a pattern. People were using this structure: Subject, Action, Environment, Style.
So I followed their style.
“Cat, soaring, nebulae and distant galaxies, vibrant and photorealistic.”
BOOM. Much better. The cat still wasn’t perfect, but it looked like an actual cat. And the background? Way more impressive. It actually looked like space, not just a black void with some colored blobs.
I kept tweaking things. I swapped out “vibrant” for “dreamy,” changed “soaring” to “floating,” added “wearing a tiny spacesuit.” Small changes, big impact. It’s all about finding the right words, the right combination of words. It felt like I was finally speaking the AI’s language, you know?
I spent like, a whole afternoon just messing with prompts. It’s kinda addictive, honestly. You keep thinking, “Okay, what if I add this word? What if I change that word?” And then you see the results, and sometimes it’s amazing, and sometimes it’s… well, let’s just say I’ve seen some pretty weird cats.
My main takeaway? Don’t be afraid to experiment. Try different combinations, see what works. And pay attention to that structure: Subject, Action, Environment, Style. It’s not a magic formula, but it’s a good starting point.
And don’t expect * with some practice, you can get some seriously cool stuff.