prompt: Black and white fashion portrait of an Asian woman wearing a wide-brimmed hat in a pool, close up shot in the style of Peter Lindbergh with a grainy film filter, cinematic lighting, soft shadows, clean sharp focus, highly detailed photography, cinematic composition, cinematic scene, hyperrealistic octane render with film grain.

“All photographs are accurate. None of them is the truth.” – Richard Avedon


On Image Engineering

AI-generated imagery is revolutionizing visual storytelling, blending human creativity with machine efficiency. This fusion opens doors to unprecedented visual possibilities, allowing us to materialize abstract concepts and explore alternate realities with startling speed and detail. However, it also challenges our perceptions of authenticity and authorship.

However, we must balance the awe-inspiring potential with ethical considerations, ensuring that AI augments rather than replaces human creative vision.

The true power lies not in the technology itself, but in how we harness it to expand our imaginative horizons and communicate in ways previously unimaginable.


More thoughts

As I continue to work in this space, on personal, but also client led projects, I am constantly challenged.

As a photographer, designer, painter, illustrator, these AI tools are amazing extensions to my craft, but they also come with baggage, sometimes disguised as Rimowa, beautifully, but comes at a price. Sometimes it looks like Samsonite, does the job, easy to buy, but does anyone even notice?

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