This Lora was created with FluxGym, default options, rank 4
My collection https://civarchive.com/user/cbrescia/models?sort=Newest§ion=published
About This LoRA – Artistic & Ethical Statement
This is not deception… this is art... digital art .
This LoRA was trained with the goal of capturing and reinterpreting the visual, expressive, and emotional essence of public figures admired for their presence in film, television, or visual media. The model does not aim to replicate any specific image exactly, but rather explores learned facial patterns, styles, and emotions to generate new, idealized, and unique representations.
📸 About the Dataset
The training set consists exclusively of publicly available, official, and professional images such as:
Promotional stills
Event photographs (red carpets, premieres)
Cinematic portraits
Other publicly accessible material
These images were carefully selected based on visual quality, facial expressiveness, and aesthetic coherence. Their use falls within what many consider acceptable under "fair use" principles — specifically for non-commercial, educational, and creative purposes .
No private, sensitive, or unauthorized content is distributed or used. The process always respects the public identity of individuals, without attempting to confuse reality with artistic interpretation.
🧮 Technical Vision: Transformation, Not Reproduction
From a mathematical and functional perspective, a LoRA does not memorize or reproduce specific images. Instead, it works more like a nonlinear regression : it learns general patterns across the data and generates new representations based on those trends.
In other words: it doesn't pass through real images like an interpolation (e.g., a Lagrange polynomial) , but interprets visual tendencies and creates from them. Therefore, outputs are not copies — they are transformations guided by style, lighting, and expression .
🎭 Artistic Vision
Artificial intelligence is not a mirror reflecting reality; it's a tool that, when guided by intention, can reveal hidden beauty. I act as the creator, director, and artist: I define the dataset, choose the parameters, design the prompts, and shape a unique style.
As makeup artists say: “we discover beauty where it’s not seen.” I simply use matrices, tensors, and synthetic light instead of brushes and pigments.
⚖️ Responsible Use
This model is intended solely for:
Artistic exploration
Educational projects
Responsible digital creation
It must not be used to generate illegal, false, offensive, or harmful content. I firmly support ethical, transparent, and respectful use of generative AI.
Stella Stevens:
Early Career and Recognition:
Stella Stevens, born Estelle Eggleston on October 1, 1938, in Yazoo City, Mississippi, USA, was an American actress who gained prominence during the 1960s and 1970s.
She began her acting career in the late 1950s and quickly gained recognition for her beauty and talent.
In 1959, she won a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year for her performance in the film "Say One for Me."
Notable Roles:
She is known for her roles in films such as:
"Girls! Girls! Girls!" (1962), where she starred alongside Elvis Presley.
"The Nutty Professor" (1963), with Jerry Lewis.
"The Poseidon Adventure" (1972).
She participated in several films with Dean Martin.
Throughout her career, she worked in a variety of film genres, from comedies to action and adventure films.
Later Career:
In addition to her work in film, Stevens also appeared in numerous television series.
She continued to act until her later years.
She was also a film director.
"Hollywood's Doll"
Yes, Stella Stevens was also known for her doll-like face, which contributed to her image as a Hollywood beauty.
Key points:
She was a versatile actress who left a mark on the golden age of Hollywood.
She died on February 17, 2023.