--- tags: - text-to-image - stable-diffusion - lora - diffusers - template:sd-lora widget: - text: >- cinematic photo a beautiful indigenous brazilian woman dressed in marajoara patterns . 35mm photograph, film, bokeh, professional, 4k, highly detailed output: url: images/image_46254583492133_00003_.png - text: >- "a vase with marajoara patterns", (Cinematic Shot:1.4) DV_S2_Chrissi_Vicious (brunette long hair:1.4)((RedTheme, Red backdrop:1.4)) wearing (Red Leather Thong and Shirt :1.4) 35mm, F/2.8 ((Photo Focus, DOF, Aperture, insanely detailed and intricate, character, hypermaximalist, elegant, ornate, beautiful, exotic, revealing, appealing, attractive, amative, hyper realistic, super detailed, heresy flares)) (smiling at viewer:1.3)(volumetric red smoke:1.3) (red lens flare:1.2) output: url: images/image_100145435354931_00004_.png - text: a painting in marajoara style output: url: images/image_191088533283864_00001_.png - text: a toy rabbit with marajoara patterns output: url: images/image_432016622703763_00001_.png - text: acoustic guitar in marajo style output: url: images/image_514531999641174_00003_.png - text: a dress with marajoara patterns output: url: images/image_841413190756065_00001_.png base_model: stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0 instance_prompt: marajoara patterns, marajo patterns, marajo license: openrail --- # Marajoara - Brazil XL ## Model description **Weights**: 0.9 - 1.4 **Keyword**: marajoara patterns; marajo patterns; marajo Marajoara art is a type of pottery that is the result of the work of indigenous peoples during the “marajoara” occupation period on the Brazilian island of Marajó, located at the mouth of the Amazon River (state of Pará), during the Brazilian pre-colonial period from 400 to 1400 AD. It is thus called marajoara pottery, as there are successive phases of occupations in the region, each with a characteristic pottery. In 1871, marajoara pottery was discovered when two researchers were visiting the Island of Marajó, the Canadian-American geologist Charles Frederick Hartt (1840-1878) and naturalist Domingos Soares Ferreira Penna (founder of the Pará Emílio Goeldi Museum in 1866). Hartt was so impressed with what he saw that he published an article in a scientific journal, revealing to the world the then unknown marajoara culture. Credits Description adapted from Wikipedia: https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arte_marajoara Images generated using weight 1.0 and with Sintetico XL as base model. ## Trigger words You should use `marajoara patterns` to trigger the image generation. You should use `marajo patterns` to trigger the image generation. You should use `marajo` to trigger the image generation. ## Download model Weights for this model are available in Safetensors format. [Download](/lucianosb/marajoara-brazil-xl/tree/main) them in the Files & versions tab.