Henri Rousseau (1844–1910) was a French painter known for his naïve style, dreamlike jungle scenes, and flattened compositions where elements coexist without traditional perspective.
This lora focuses on capturing some of his core visual language, including dense jungle vegetation, simplified forms, and compositions built through layering and placement rather than depth. The intention is not to replicate specific paintings, but to bring a Rousseau-like structure and atmosphere into different subjects.
The cover images are generated using ControlNet image to image, mainly to show how the lora behaves across different compositions.
This lora works well for jungle scenes, stylized environments, and portraits placed in flattened or non-perspective spaces. pixelwave flux is recommended if you want a more cohesive painterly result, but different base models will give different interpretations.
Note: this is not a one-click style filter. The lora captures part of the structure, but it does not fully enforce it on its own. For stronger results, you may need additional guidance such as ControlNet, more structured prompts, or composition-aware inputs. It usually takes a few tries to get something that really feels right.