Death made manifest. The Jackal Queen stalks among the living.
Please checkout my other Originals: https://civarchive.com/collections/10419357
I wanted to design an Egyptian character that was a bit different. Most Egyptian characters wear white clothes but as the goddess of death it seemed fitting to have her wearing black clothes: crop top, pelvic curtain, and thighhighs.
Thighhighs are also an atypical thing to wear in the desert so it gives that Zettai Ryouiki flair and a bit of uniqueness.
Description
Seems like Images * Repeats = about 100 is the sweet spot for free tier XL Google Colab. About 200 is certainly better but sometimes Google Colab times out if Training runs that long.
Trained on: 11 images
Repeats: 10
Batch: 5
Epoch: 10
Steps: 220
FAQ
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There's something interesting that I just learned about the Egyptian deities not too long ago. Apparently, some of the gods had both masculine and feminine versions of their names that people would refer to. Anubis was one of them. His female version was named Anput, who was also simultaneously considered male Anubis's wife.
In other words, I guess girl Anubis is cannon.
Nice! Thanks for sharing. I knew that Egyptian feminine names often ended in "t" like Hatshepsut or Bastet.
Its cool that there was lora for female variants of the gods. Also its funny that Anput is both the variant name and an actual person as Anubis's wife.
Unlike Greek and Roman mythology I think Egpytian mythology blurs the lines a lot where their gods don't have very set in stone characteristics.
@CitronLegacy To be fair, I think a lot of mythologies have that same issue. Egypt just happened to be worse about it.
I was actually watching a video by Overly Sarcastic Productions the other day (Youtube channel that talks about mythology, literature, and history) in where a big discussion point was that narrative cohesion is often a good way to tell when a myth is fake with very little exception. Over great time and distances, many common threads just snaps.
@Diamond_Letter
That an interesting point! I supposed that doesn't imply that "narrative cohesion" proves a religious claim is true but a lack of cohesion certainly makes it way less legit lol.
I love Egyptian mythology but Egyptian seems notorious for lack of cohesion because their "main guy" is supposed to be Ra but then he got fused with Amun and become a new deity.
Whereas in Greek/Roman, Zeus is still the same philandering king who does whatever he wants even when his name is changed to Jupiter.
As a side note, Vampire lore seems to be pretty consistent and cohesive so maybe... LOL
@CitronLegacy Funny you mention the vampire thing, because I remember hearing that many of the consistent symptoms of it were actually attributable to diseases that were spreading at the time. Pellagra was one vitamin deficiency that cause pale skin and photophobia, so a lot of people attribute it to that. Once, I came to realize how similar vampire traits were to rabies (photophobia, hydrophobia, bites), which seems to actually be a common realization. The fact that a lot of animals have rabies probably also is probably related to the turning into a bat or wolf (Dracula did that) feature. I guess the myth consistency rule there didn't apply there because a lot of Europeans saw the same things in reality, much like how basically all religions agree that there is some sun god.
There is still some drift with that though. Adventure Time: Stakes and Vampire: The Masquerades basically put the evolution and variety of the monster type on display for all to see using characters and factions respectively.
@Diamond_Letter Love this conversation 💖
@n_Arno Glad I came back for the new lora version to see you enjoying my rambling on mythology.
Here I was thinking that my sober yet stoner-esk spiel on vampires was a bit lame.
And thanks for the LoRa!
@edau102 Glad you like the lora! Thanks for summoning me back to this thread!
@Diamond_Letter This "came to realize how similar vampire traits were to rabies (photophobia, hydrophobia, bites), which seems to actually be a common realization. The fact that a lot of animals have rabies probably also is probably related to the turning into a bat or wolf (Dracula did that) feature" hits hard lol. Now that you say it sounds so obvious. I don't think this diminishes the nature of the mythology/lore. Ancient mythology is based on people being afraid of lighting, the dark, forests, but that is legitimately based on the dangers associated with those things when you don't understand them or are unprepared.
And legit or not it makes for a great story!
Since we are talking about myth consistency and its Christmas Eve Eve as I write this, the Santa Claus mythology is pretty consistent across many countries (maybe?). I'm not sure if kids these days believe in Santa but if they do isn't it an interesting concept that everyone accepts the same idea that Santa can travel around the entire world in just one night? Across different cultures/countries everyone knows the same myth. Unless thats just the same thing as everyone knowing who Batman is because he is popular?
@CitronLegacy I wouldn't say it's that phenomenal that everyone has the same image of Santa. That's the modern version of the myth, and Western media is pretty efficient at unifying those.
I knew the Italians do something different, but looking into it, a bunch of nations except for them standardized to Santa at some point, and Santa itself carries influences from a bunch of previous myths due to the integrative expansion methods of the Catholic Church.
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