

A more romantic version of my Albatross LoRA -less naturally ominous and more portrait friendly. Kind of not especially my preference but as usual, the prompt can push those buttons in different directions.
The sample gallery features no-prompt generations using just the LoRA at a weight of 1.0.
Arthur Rackham and Norman Lindsay styles are the prominent artist influences. If you aren't familiar with their works, you are missing out -track them down and discover just how different the output from this LoRA really is.
We recommend using these trigger words when prompting StorybookMystery to get the best results:
This LoRA is awesome! Thank you for creating it.
What a fabulous LoRA, wow! I wanted to see what it could do as a stand alone LoRA and it does great, thank you. ♥️
@hammondrye I have chose your lora along with two others to feature in my RPGCL Lora Mix of the Week challenge starting tomorrow! Feel free to join in and see what others make with the mix and even enter yourself if you like!
Alright, this is an amazing LoRA! You know I like all of your LoRAs that I have tried, and this is another great one!
I just ran it with a few old prompts, to get a feel for it, and Albatross and StorybookMystery are definitely cousins. StorybookMystery is the more whimsical, light-hearted of the two, but they both have the same delightful flavor of utter weirdness.
And for all it's strange beauty, StorybookMystery performs really well with horror prompts as well. Eerily well in fact. As if it takes the horror prompt and gleefully doubles down on it: "You want dark? I'll give you dark and then some!" 😁
Anyway, this is perfection, thank you for sharing it with everybody! 🖤🖤🖤

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