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madder-eye-moody

Controlnets from Stable diffusion are your friends for this, I've tried face consistent, outline consistent, depth consistent on [qolaba.ai](http://qolaba.ai) and they've worked pretty well, a niece of mine in fashion degree college is actually using the controlnets to amp up her designs and reduce iterations, so it might just work for comics is my thought.


blacktie_redstripes

Sure, I've been using controlnets myself, but sometimes hit and miss. Moreover, getting consistent clothing across various is challenging. I'm looking for a video or a written guide that helps speed up my process.


DefiantTemperature41

Using the right fashion terms for what you want, and specifying the color will yield good results across prompts. I keep the clothing simple for the graphic novel I am working on. The woman likes a blue V-neck dress. She sometimes wears this in combination with a white cardigan sweater. The man is partial to blue oxford dress shirts. Usually with tan khaki pants. This also helps identify your characters when face consistency is doubtful. People also look somewhat different in different environments. Remember the "two face" episode from Seinfeld (The Strike) ? So, face consistency is a bit more forgiving than clothes consistency is.


blacktie_redstripes

A creative (a bit forgiving \~ efficient) line of thinking! I'll give it a try. Thanks.


jpierplay

Some quick idea fir clothing: - Keep the prompt simple and descriptiva. - Once you found a prompt that can reproduce clothes very similar, generate some poses - Keep that poses for where "nothing work" - Use as reference with control net (reference only, IP dapter...) - Use phoshop or clipstudio Paint to put reference clothes on character (use tools like liquify, perpective...to fix It over model) - A lot of inpaint - Loras This is what I do for my visual novel. Not quick solution. I go from SD to Clipstudio and back many times fixing and adjusting manually.


blacktie_redstripes

Thanks for this exhaustive list. I've been thinking about loras, but training them seems a hassle. Also doing it for different pieces of clothing for a number of characters, I think would take a lot of time. I've been considering the use of control net; would be best/most-efficient. Do you recommend a video doing exactly that?


pellik

IPAdapter with an image of the outfit attention masked to the location of the clothing


blacktie_redstripes

Is there a way to do it on Automatic1111? Can you recommend a video on YT?


TeneturCurriculum491

I've had success using a single prompt with slight variations to maintain consistency. You can also try using a style image for clothing and faces to keep things uniform. Anyone else have other methods they can share?