Trained on illustrations from ‘Elektroschutz in 132 Bildern’ (1936) by Viennese physician Stefan Jellinek (1878-1968)
Trained as part of glif.app #loradex project - check out their Discord
Run LoRA here on glif - glif - Elektroschutz ⚡ by an303042
Description
FAQ
Comments (7)
Nice visuals, but some example prompts would be helpful. :)
Thank you for the compliment. I'm sorry but I was under the impression that you could download the image from civitai and pnginfo will still hold the workflow.
I'm more than happy to share data and prompts. Most of my latest batch were made with plush nodes LLM input (used groq since its free). The result is a bit convoluted sometimes, but when it works, it works well (50% of the time it works every time).
Here is an example -
lktro A retro-style public safety warning poster depicting the dangers of spontaneous disco outbreaks in a crowded city street scene, as a giant, flashing disco ball hovers menacingly above the pavement, emitting intense, pulsing light beams. A lone figure, clad in iconic 1970s disco attire, complete with afro and platform shoes, stands at the edge of a swirling dance vortex, about to be sucked in by the irresistible beat, while surrounding pedestrians are already succumbing to the infectious rhythm. The central figure is encircled by a vibrant, warning red aura, accompanied by dynamic, bold lines radiating outward, cautioning against the dangers of the dance vortex. In the background, city dwellers in various states of disco-induced frenzy dance wildly, oblivious to the perils around them. The entire scene is set against a stylized, flat perspective, rendered in a simplified, high-contrast style reminiscent of early 20th-century safety posters, complete with thick black lines, bold red accents, and stylized, distressed textures that evoke a nostalgic, retro aesthetic. In bold, sans-serif font, the prominent warning labels "Danger: Spontaneous Disco Outbreak" and "Warning: Do Not Approach the Dance Vortex" are emblazoned across the image, serving as a cautionary notice to the viewer.
@an303042 It does indeed contain the metadata. Unfortunately, the workflow that was used is useless in txt2img. It won't even send it over. The embedded metadata that is useful is the prompt, the step, clip, sampling method, and so on. It's not just text. And workflow stuff isn't compatible.
This is a hilarious LoRA!
Thank you for posting the prompt on reddit, which serves as a good template:
reddit. com/r/StableDiffusion/comments/1fqgo3l/elektroschutz_styled_warnings_nobody_asked_for/
https://civitai.com/images/31490916
LLM assisted, end result looked something like -
lktro A retro-style public safety warning poster depicting the dangers of spontaneous disco outbreaks in a crowded city street scene, as a giant, flashing disco ball hovers menacingly above the pavement, emitting intense, pulsing light beams. A lone figure, clad in iconic 1970s disco attire, complete with afro and platform shoes, stands at the edge of a swirling dance vortex, about to be sucked in by the irresistible beat, while surrounding pedestrians are already succumbing to the infectious rhythm. The central figure is encircled by a vibrant, warning red aura, accompanied by dynamic, bold lines radiating outward, cautioning against the dangers of the dance vortex. In the background, city dwellers in various states of disco-induced frenzy dance wildly, oblivious to the perils around them. The entire scene is set against a stylized, flat perspective, rendered in a simplified, high-contrast style reminiscent of early 20th-century safety posters, complete with thick black lines, bold red accents, and stylized, distressed textures that evoke a nostalgic, retro aesthetic. In bold, sans-serif font, the prominent warning labels "Danger: Spontaneous Disco Outbreak" and "Warning: Do Not Approach the Dance Vortex" are emblazoned across the image, serving as a cautionary notice to the viewer.
My pleasure! Glad you like it and thanks for sharing your work ⚡
@an303042 You are welcome 🙏
Here is an article discussing the book https://flashbak.com/1936-how-to-die-by-electrocution-in-30-pictures-12254/
Elektroschutz in 132 Bildern’ (Electrical Protection in 132 Pictures) by Viennese physician Stefan Jellinek
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Same model published on other platforms. May have additional downloads or version variants.


















