Documented engine outputs

One subject, new scenes—shown with provenance

The first strip uses a fully synthetic adult so no real person's likeness is being marketed without consent. The illustrated strips use public-domain sources. Every displayed frame is an engine output, and the public manifest records its source, prompt, and human verdict.

SCENE 01Mara · synthetic adult — reference portrait, same person
Reference portrait
SCENE 02Mara · synthetic adult — home workspace, same person
Home workspace
SCENE 03Mara · synthetic adult — rooftop, new outfit, same person
Rooftop, new outfit
SCENE 04Mara · synthetic adult — fashion lookbook, same person
Fashion lookbook
Mara · synthetic adult4 frames · one person
Mara · synthetic adult held across 4 frames. AI-generated adult reference; no real person or likeness; scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.
SCENE 01Peter Rabbit — riding a bicycle, same character
Riding a bicycle
SCENE 02Peter Rabbit — reading under a tree, same character
Reading under a tree
SCENE 03Peter Rabbit — sailing a paper boat, same character
Sailing a paper boat
Peter Rabbit3 frames · one character
Peter Rabbit held across 3 frames. Public-domain character (Beatrix Potter, 1902); scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.
SCENE 01Little Miss Muffet — baking in a kitchen, same character
Baking in a kitchen
SCENE 02Little Miss Muffet — flying a kite, same character
Flying a kite
SCENE 03Little Miss Muffet — watering flowers, same character
Watering flowers
Little Miss Muffet3 frames · one character
Little Miss Muffet held across 3 frames. Public-domain nursery-rhyme plate (Kate Greenaway style); scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.
SCENE 01Little Red Riding Hood — picking apples, same character
Picking apples
SCENE 02Little Red Riding Hood — rowing a boat, same character
Rowing a boat
Little Red Riding Hood2 frames · one character
Little Red Riding Hood held across 2 frames. Public-domain folk-tale plate (Rackham style); scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.
SCENE 01A Brownie — umbrella in the rain, same character
Umbrella in the rain
SCENE 02A Brownie — fishing at a pond, same character
Fishing at a pond
A Brownie2 frames · one character
A Brownie held across 2 frames. Public-domain character (Palmer Cox line art); scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.
SCENE 01The White Rabbit — riding a scooter, same character
Riding a scooter
SCENE 02The White Rabbit — watering flowers, same character
Watering flowers
The White Rabbit2 frames · one character
The White Rabbit held across 2 frames. Public-domain character (Tenniel engraving); scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.
SCENE 01The Cowardly Lion — riding a bicycle, same character
Riding a bicycle
SCENE 02The Cowardly Lion — baking a cake, same character
Baking a cake
The Cowardly Lion2 frames · one character
The Cowardly Lion held across 2 frames. Public-domain character (Denslow, Oz, 1900); scenes generated on the EditThisPic editor.

The person example is synthetic by design

We first generated an invented adult named Mara from an already synthetic seed, with instructions not to resemble a public figure or known person. We then used that generated reference for eleven new scenes: workspace, rooftop, podcast, cafe, lookbook, keynote, generic product demonstration, trail, side profile, full-body walk, and founder desk. We judged identity, hair, build, and the outfit whenever it was locked. All eleven were usable in this discovery pass.

The four-frame strip shows the reference and three of those outputs. It demonstrates a real capability without borrowing anyone's identity. It does not prove that every real adult, angle, lighting condition, or reference set will perform the same way; the limitations page states that boundary plainly.

The illustrated examples use public-domain sources

Peter Rabbit, the White Rabbit, Little Miss Muffet, a Palmer Cox brownie, and the other illustrated subjects began as public-domain images from Wikimedia Commons. Each was placed into a new scene and judged beside its source for face, costume, distinctive marks, and art medium. Fifteen of eighteen illustrated test scenes were usable; the softer scenes came from ambiguous or face-hidden input.

What the manifest records

Provenance

The public file at /examples/sources.json records the synthetic-reference method, every person-bench prompt and verdict, each illustrated source page and license, the engine route, and the prompt used for every displayed frame.

For your own project, use yourself as an adult, a consenting adult, a hired adult model, or a synthetic adult. Do not use public figures, people who have not consented, minors as a marketed use, deceptive impersonation, fabricated endorsements, nudity, or suggestive scenes. Illustrated characters must be yours, public domain, or properly licensed.

Questions, answered plainly

Is Mara a real person?

No. Mara is a fully synthetic adult generated specifically for this test from an already synthetic seed. The prompt explicitly requested an invented identity with no resemblance to a public figure or known person.

Were unsuccessful person scenes removed from the gallery?

No person case failed this eleven-scene discovery pass. Only four frames are shown to keep the page readable, while every case and verdict is listed in the public manifest and summarized on the limitations page.

Why are some illustrated characters shown in only two scenes?

The illustrated gallery only shows outputs judged usable. Softer results are discussed on the limitations page rather than used as capability examples.

Can I make a set with my own adult photos?

Yes. Use your own adult references, or an adult who has explicitly agreed to the use. The editor is free to start and needs no signup for the first try; compare every output against the approved references before publishing.

Build one approved scene

Bring your own adult references, those of a consenting adult, or an owned illustrated character, then judge the first output before making a set.

Opens in the EditThisPic editor — free to start, no signup.