For the uninitiated, this looks like a fragmented file name or a command line argument. For digital artists, prompt engineers, and LoRA enthusiasts, it represents a specific mood , a texture , and a controlled distortion that standard models fail to capture.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | LoRA weight too low or not triggered. | Increase weight to 0.35 or add (mummy textures:1.2) to prompt. | | Subject is actually a mummy (bandages, no face) | Weight too high (>0.6) or conflicting with a "horror" negative prompt. | Reduce weight to 0.2-0.25. Add (face, visible eyes) to positive prompt. | | Too blurry / melted | Sampler incompatibility. | Switch to Euler a or DPM++ 2M SDE Karras . Reduce steps to 25. | | Colors are wrong (too green) | Base model showstars missing or corrupted. | Use a color correction LoRA or manually adjust hue in post. | | Limbs look broken, not wrapped | The "edit" part of mummy edit is being interpreted as "broken bones" by some models. | Add (anatomy, correct proportions) to positive prompt. Add (malformed limbs, extra arms) to negative. | showstars - lora 01 -mummy edit-.25
LoRA is a technique used in deep learning to reduce the number of trainable parameters by creating a small set of new weights for an existing model. In the world of AI art, these models are often used to: For the uninitiated, this looks like a fragmented
Users typically employ these files to achieve consistent character appearances or specific thematic styles. A "full write-up" on such a file would generally cover its , optimal trigger words , and compatibility with different base models (like SDXL or Pony Diffusion). | Increase weight to 0
: Indicates this is the first version or the primary model in a specific set.
: Likely the name of a specific model series or collection of digital assets used in image generation software.