Why? So it can look like all the other art out there?
To me that'd seem to defeat much of the purpose.
Same principle as playing music - sometimes the very best stuff comes from people with no "professional" training whatsoever. They just play what sounds good, and how about that - it sounds good even though music teachers everywhere would squawk because it doesn't always follow the patterns and progressions etc. it's supposed to.
That's exactly why we post in this thread!
And you mean illustrator, right... Artists make art, illustrators illustrate, the later work for their money.
I know this is a controversial topic, and that is why we have this thread - so the conversation can stay here. Folks can easily avoid this discussion if they wish.
For the record, I don't use AI art in any of my commercial products, as you can easily verify. This thread is for experiments and fun only, from my perspective. Having said that, I suspect AI will play an increasing role in many/most professions in the future, including the creative arts.
Design and composition in art are analagous to chords and chord progressions in music: "basic fundamentals" that sometimes the truly creative are better off never knowing about.Design and composition have nothing to do with visual "style," which shows how little you actually know.
If you ain't got the talent for it, no amount of "learning" is going to give you that talent.Metroido said:And why not just learn to draw? It's not only a lot more rewarding, but a lot more decent as well.
And why not just learn to draw? It's not only a lot more rewarding, but a lot more decent as well.
Once the bots can write and draw as well as humans, it's an open question whether my publications will have much commercial value anymore. Myself and other indie creators are grappling with this now, and I know some who are planning to exit the industry before the "AI apocalypse" hits.Well, whenever you do decide to use it in your commercial work, I expect you'll start giving away your creative writing away as well, yes? If not, I, and others, will.
Design and composition in art are analagous to chords and chord progressions in music: "basic fundamentals" that sometimes the truly creative are better off never knowing about.
If you ain't got the talent for it, no amount of "learning" is going to give you that talent.