Home/Portrait & Photography/False-Color Garden Portrait

Portrait & Photography

False-Color Garden Portrait

False-Color Garden Portrait is a reusable Portrait & Photography example from Ashish Sheth, including the full prompt, source link, and output media.

Case Media

Case Notes

This page keeps the media, full prompt, and original source together so you can inspect the result first and decide whether the prompt is worth copying, saving, or comparing.

Case Insights

To make this page easier to search, cite, and reuse later, the case is also broken down into practical guidance about usage, visual cues, and prompt structure.

Best Fit Scenarios

  • Use this as a portrait & photography benchmark when you need a fast style baseline before rewriting your own prompt.
  • It is especially helpful if your target overlaps with 35mm, Portrait, Vertical and you want to judge the image result before tuning wording.
  • Keep it as a control sample when you compare nearby prompt variants one variable at a time.

Visual Signals To Notice

  • The clearest style signals here are 35mm, Portrait, Vertical, so those should usually stay in your first rewrite.
  • Focus on framing, light direction, pose, and the distance between subject and camera.
  • This case keeps 2 media outputs, which makes it easier to check whether the style remains stable across multiple results.

How The Prompt Is Structured

  • The prompt reads as a long, highly specified prompt, which is useful when you want to judge how much specificity this direction needs.
  • Its keyword cluster is centered on 35mm, Portrait, Vertical, so you can usually keep that cluster while swapping subject, camera, layout, or copy details.
  • A practical rewrite path is: keep the outcome, keep the strongest style cues, then replace only the subject and environment blocks.

Good Follow-up Questions

  • What changes first if you keep 35mm, Portrait, Vertical but switch the subject matter?
  • Which part of the result comes from section-level structure (Portrait & Photography) versus tag-level style cues?
  • Which related cases in the same section give you a cleaner or more extreme variation of the same direction?

Full Prompt

A surreal medium-format portrait of a woman standing on a narrow garden path surrounded by extremely dense foliage, photographed in a dreamlike false-color film look. She wears a plain bright saturated {argument name="shirt color" default="red"} crew-neck T-shirt and dark black fitted pants, with shoulder-length dark hair that is slightly tousled and parted off-center. Her pose is relaxed and natural, arms hanging loosely at her sides, body facing the camera with a subtle turn, framed from about mid-thigh upward. The setting is an overgrown botanical garden packed with ferns, ivy, shrubs, and flowering plants on both sides of the path; all vegetation is dramatically color-shifted from green into vivid magenta, lavender, pink, and deep purple, creating an unnatural LomoChrome Purple XR aesthetic. Keep the subject's shirt intensely saturated and realistic against the transformed environment for strong visual contrast. Use soft overcast daylight, shallow to moderate depth of field, and medium format rendering with a {argument name="camera" default="Mamiya RB67"} feel, shot with a {argument name="lens" default="90mm lens"} at {argument name="aperture" default="f/5.6"}. Include organic film grain, slight edge halation, gentle vignette, soft bloom in highlights, and subtle vintage film border edges. Composition should be vertical in a {argument name="aspect ratio" default="6:7"} frame, with the subject centered slightly left of the path, foreground and background foliage softly blurred while remaining lush and detailed, producing an eerie, romantic, otherworldly portrait.

Related Cases