OpenArt Logo
Sign in

Paul Rayment

Paul Rayment

Model: OpenArt SDXL

Prompt:

Zbrush, Futuristic racing vehicle, sleek and aerodynamic, highangle view, bathed in the glow of n...Show more
Width: 1024
Height: 1024
Scale: 7
Steps: 25
Seed: 1208999980
Sampler: DPM++ 2M SDE Karras

Create your first image using OpenArt.

With over 100+ models and styles to choose from, you can create stunning images.

More images like this
Prompt: (full body photorealistic image of a futuristic car, frontal perspective), inspired by (Star Wars), featuring (spaceship designs), set in a (cyberpunk environment), showcasing (neon lights, metallic surfaces), amidst a (dystopian cityscape), for a (vibrant atmosphere), enhanced by (dramatic shadows) and (high-contrast lighting), ultra-detailed and 4K resolution.
Prompt: Sports car, glossy metallic finish, lights reflecting on the car, dynamic and sleek design, high quality, dynamic design
Prompt: a cyberpunk hyper sports car in a night city environment at sunset
Prompt: Futuristic hydrogen supercar, glossy metallic finish, sleek aerodynamic design, cutting-edge technology, high-tech interior, futuristic cityscape backdrop, vibrant neon lights, high quality, ultra-detailed, futuristic, sleek design, high-tech, hydrogen-powered, cityscape, glossy metallic, vibrant neon lights, aerodynamic, cutting-edge technology, professional, atmospheric lighting
Prompt: A dynamic architectural car from the future bearing the character of japan architecture with modernity
Prompt: Make me a car futuristic
Prompt: Zbrush, Futuristic racing vehicle, sleek and aerodynamic, highangle view, bathed in the glow of neon underlights, color palette of neon blues and silvers, style of Vitaly Bulgarov, intense spotlights, 3D digital art aesthetic, octane render, 4k resolution, sharp details::1.6, highfidelity::1.2, photorealistic rendering::1.5
Prompt: rich alien in a alien sports car
Prompt: Build a super car original design that doesn't mimmic or take away from anything that exist except the laws of physics and common working knowledge no proprietary knowledge