Subject and likeness
Use 1 image and keep the defining subject details intact. Focus on this subject requirement: preserve facial structure, expression, hair shape, and the details that make the person recognizable.
Create a Prairie horse cinematic portrait with a portrait-focused composition that keeps the person recognizable and visually engaging. Start from the reference image so the subject, source structure, or key visual details stay anchored while the style changes. This recipe is useful for profile photos, social avatars, personal branding, character studies, and portrait variations.

Use this section to decide whether Prairie horse cinematic portrait is the right recipe before spending credits on variations.
Best for
Prairie horse cinematic portrait concepts where the example image is close to the result you want.
Not ideal for
Formal ID photos, passport photos, or strict corporate headshots.
Best for
Visual directions built around a portrait-first look that preserves identity while changing the visual treatment.
Not ideal for
Subtle retouching where the original photo should barely change.
Best for
Compositions that benefit from a background that frames the person without competing with facial features.
Not ideal for
Product-only images with no person or character as the subject.
Best for
Fast testing with Seedream 4.5 in 3:4.
Not ideal for
Cases where exact wardrobe, pose, and lighting must be legally or medically precise.
Keep the core idea of Prairie horse cinematic portrait, then change the details that control identity, style, color, background, and framing.
Use 1 image and keep the defining subject details intact. Focus on this subject requirement: preserve facial structure, expression, hair shape, and the details that make the person recognizable.
Dial the style up or down while preserving this intent: a portrait-first look that preserves identity while changing the visual treatment.
Keep, limit, or replace the color direction while respecting this goal: colors that support the face, skin tone, wardrobe, and mood without overpowering the subject.
Use the background as a control surface: a background that frames the person without competing with facial features.
Start with 3:4. Then adjust the framing around this composition goal: frame the subject clearly for 3:4, with readable facial features and enough breathing room.
If Prairie horse cinematic portrait is close but not usable yet, make one of these targeted prompt edits before changing everything.
If the subject drifts, add a direct instruction to preserve facial structure, expression, hair shape, and the details that make the person recognizable.
Ask for fewer competing elements while preserving the intended style: a portrait-first look that preserves identity while changing the visual treatment.
Limit saturation, reduce competing colors, and keep the palette aligned with this goal: colors that support the face, skin tone, wardrobe, and mood without overpowering the subject.
Strengthen light direction, depth, and separation using this lighting goal: directional light that gives the face depth while keeping the result flattering.
Use these as short alternate directions for Prairie horse cinematic portrait; each variant keeps the recipe recognizable while pushing a different outcome.
A cleaner Prairie horse cinematic portrait with fewer competing details, restrained color, and a simpler background.
A more campaign-ready Prairie horse cinematic portrait with stronger styling, clearer hierarchy, and more deliberate lighting.
A calmer Prairie horse cinematic portrait with softer contrast, gentler color, and a quieter background.
A refined Prairie horse cinematic portrait tuned for Seedream 4.5, composed for 3:4, and cleaned up for final use.

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