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Unveiling the Art of Fabric: A Photorealistic Transformation

What if your outfit could literally tear away? This striking portrait blurs the lines between fashion and art, revealing the beauty beneath a paper layer.

Prompt

{
  "title": "Mousatsu - Rear-view paper-tear bottoms (photorealistic)",
  "prompt": "Ultra-photorealistic, full-body rear-view portrait of an adult person (explicitly age 25+) standing with their back mostly to the camera and looking back over the shoulder toward the lens. The subject wears a normal top and a pair of bottoms (pants, shorts, or skirt) whose lower-body surface is rendered as a single flat sheet of paper printed with the original garment's pattern. The paper-printed bottoms are horizontally and sharply torn in one continuous jagged line across the lower back, revealing a narrow horizontal strip of bare skin across the lower back. The torn line runs from the left edge to the right edge of the frame; although jagged, it forms an overall predominantly straight horizontal cut. Show the thin cross-section of the torn paper with visible paper fiber texture; edges are slightly peeled and curled, naturally blending into the skin. The exposed skin strip is tasteful and non-sexualized. Composition: full body centered, wide horizontal frame, the tear aligned approximately at lower-back / waist level so the exposed strip is clearly visible across the frame. Lighting: natural soft studio lighting, subtle rim light to separate subject from background, realistic skin shading and subsurface scattering. Camera: simulated 85mm portrait lens, shallow depth of field but full body in pleasing focus, high resolution and hyper-detailed (skin pores, hair strands, paper fiber, printed pattern on paper, tiny tears and curl shadows). Color and texture: original garment pattern accurately reproduced on the paper, realistic fabric-to-paper transition, correct cast shadows where paper lifts, believable shadow from torn edges on the skin. Pose and mood: natural relaxed stance, looking back over shoulder at camera, neutral expression. Style: ultra photorealistic, hyperdetailed, cinematic, high resolution, 8k render quality. Safety: subject is an adult (25+), tasteful non-explicit depiction, avoid sexualization. Include precise physical realism and material studies for paper, skin, and cloth/paper edges.",
  "negative_prompt": "cartoon, low-res, blurry, out of focus, watermark, text, extra limbs, multiple faces, mutated hands, deformed anatomy, unrealistic proportions, pornographic, explicit nudity (genitals, breasts, nipples), minors, sexual acts, offensive content, oversaturated colors, painting, sketch, CGI artifacts, oversharpened, jpeg artifacts",
  "composition_settings": {
    "view": "rear / over-the-shoulder",
    "framing": "full-body, horizontal/wide",
    "tear_position": "lower back / waist level, spanning full frame horizontally",
    "paper_behavior": "single continuous tear line, jagged but overall straight; thin cross-section; peeled/curling edges; visible paper fibers"
  },
  "photographic_settings": {
    "camera": "simulated 85mm",
    "aperture": "f/2.8 (shallow DOF)",
    "iso": "100-200",
    "shutter_speed": "1/125",
    "resolution": "8k",
    "lighting": "soft studio key + subtle rim, natural color grading"
  },
  "render_settings": {
    "sampler": "Euler a",
    "steps": 40,
    "cfg_scale": 7.5,
    "seed": null,
    "model": "photoreal-high-detail"
  },
  "notes_for_artist_or_model": [
    "Confirm subject age 25+ in metadata to avoid underage depiction.",
    "When reproducing the original garment pattern on the paper, match scale and perspective so printed design aligns with body curvature but remains visibly printed-on-paper (no cloth wrinkles except where paper curls at tear).",
    "The exposed skin strip must be narrow and tasteful — do NOT reveal breasts or intimate areas. Keep the reveal limited to a horizontal band of lower-back skin.",
    "Emphasize realistic paper cross-section (thinness, fibers) and subtle shadows where paper detaches from skin.",
    "Prioritize photoreal material rendering over stylization."
  ]
}
Published: December 1, 2025