Dressed animals refer to animals that have been adorned or outfitted with clothing or accessories for various purposes, including entertainment, cultural traditions, or artistic expression. This practice has a long history and can be found in different cultures around the world.
In some cases, dressing animals is done for practical reasons, such as protecting them from harsh weather conditions or providing them with specialized gear for specific tasks, such as working animals or therapy animals. For example, horses may be dressed in saddles and bridles for riding, or guide dogs may wear special harnesses.
However, there is also a long tradition of dressing animals for decorative or symbolic purposes. This can be seen in various cultural practices, such as costumes worn by performing animals in circuses or costumes used in traditional ceremonies and festivals involving animals.
Dressing animals can also be seen in artistic and creative contexts. Artists may create whimsical or fantastical scenes by dressing animals in elaborate costumes or outfits, blurring the boundaries between reality and imagination. This can be seen in various forms of visual art, such as paintings, illustrations, or sculptures.
While dressing animals can sometimes raise ethical considerations, particularly when it involves discomfort or harm to the animals, in many cases it is done with care and respect for the well-being of the animals involved. In artistic and creative contexts, dressing animals can serve as a form of expression, adding a touch of whimsy, humor, or beauty to the depiction of animals in art.
Overall, dressed animals reflect the diverse ways in which humans interact with and represent the animal kingdom, blending practicality, cultural significance, and artistic expression.
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awesome lora's you make, keep up the work! could you maybe share with me the LoRa training settings/parameters you use for the style training? mail [ramon at monsieurpixel dot nl]
I am trying to make a few lora styles on Loui Jover
Love to hear from you!
Looks verry nice, but it seems I get an error... Does not work for me :( wetransfer link to the text file with the error if anyone have the know how and can help it will be apreciated, thank you.
@Av0iDGoDLike Download and install the LyCORIS extension:
https://github.com/KohakuBlueleaf/a1111-sd-webui-lycoris
Then transfer all your LoRA models from the LoRA folder to the LyCORIS folder and everything should work and even work faster and better than just LoRA.
@Kappa_Neuro did that, same issue
@Kappa_Neuro this is the main error I get in web-ui:
RuntimeError: The size of tensor a (768) must match the size of tensor b (1024) at non-singleton dimension 1
Time taken: 0.01s
Torch active/reserved: 2149/2170 MiB, Sys VRAM: 4550/24576 MiB (18.51%)
@Av0iDGoDLike What kind of checkpoint do you use?
@Av0iDGoDLike i aslo have this problem





