01
Camera & Film Stock
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The camera body determines the sensor size and overall image quality. The film stock reference tells the AI what kind of grain, color response, and mood to emulate -- it is appended to every prompt.
Camera Body
This determines the overall image quality, dynamic range, and sensor characteristics referenced in prompts.
Arri Alexa Mini LF
Large format, cinema standard. Beautiful skin tones, wide dynamic range.
Arri Alexa 35
Latest generation. Enhanced low-light, 4.6K. Slightly cleaner than Mini LF.
RED V-Raptor
8K sensor, very sharp. More clinical/digital look compared to Arri warmth.
Sony Venice 2
Dual ISO, excellent low-light. Slightly cooler tones than Arri. Popular for streaming.
Blackmagic URSA Mini Pro
More affordable look. Slightly less refined color science. Good for gritty aesthetics.
Film Stock Reference
This tells the AI what grain texture, color warmth, and overall film "feel" to emulate. It is appended to every image prompt.
Kodak Vision3 500T
Warm tungsten balance, visible grain, gorgeous in low light. The classic.
Kodak Vision3 250D
Daylight balanced, finer grain. Cooler, more neutral. Great for exteriors.
Kodak Vision3 200T
Tungsten, finest grain of the Kodak range. Cleaner but still warm.
Fuji Eterna 500T
Cooler tones than Kodak, less visible grain. More clinical, slightly desaturated.
Fuji Eterna Vivid 500
Saturated and punchy. Higher contrast, bolder colors. A distinctive look.
02
Lens Package
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Each lens creates a different visual feeling. Wider lenses show more environment and create dramatic distortion. Longer lenses compress space and isolate subjects. The aperture (f-number) controls how blurry the background is -- lower numbers mean more blur and more subject isolation.
Primary Lens
Your workhorse. Used for medium shots, close-ups, dialogue scenes, and general coverage. This is the lens most of the show is shot on.
Close-Up Lens
For emotional beats, detail shots, and portraits. Shows the debt counter on a wrist, the fear in someone's eyes. Background falls away to nothing.
Wide Lens
For establishing shots, showing the full environment, action sequences. Shows how small humans are against the massive ship architecture.
Specialty Lens
For extreme moments only. Root Cathedral interiors looking up into the canopy, planet surface first sky reveal. The "overwhelm" lens.
03
Color Palette
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These HEX colors are embedded into every image generation prompt. They define the exact shades for surfaces, lighting, and accents throughout the show. Click a swatch to change its color.
Global Palette
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Lower Decks -- Salvage Territory
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Mid-Ship Infrastructure
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The Root -- Organic Growth Zone
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Crown Level -- Command
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Shuttle Bay & Planet Surface
04
Characters
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Visual identity for each main character, including wardrobe progression across the series. Accent colors are used in lighting and prompt conditioning.
05
Locations
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Each zone of the ship has a distinct visual identity -- architecture, lighting, and color palette. These descriptions are injected into prompts for any scene set in that zone.
06
Lighting Guides
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Six lighting moods used across the series. Each has specific prompt language that is injected when that mood is called for. The prompt language tells the AI exactly what kind of light to create.
07
Quality Guard & Negative Prompt
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Text appended to every prompt to ensure consistent quality. The quality guard adds positive reinforcement (correct anatomy, sharp focus). The negative prompt tells the AI what to avoid (deformed hands, blurry images, cartoon style).
Quality Guard (Positive)
Appended to ALL positive prompts. Ensures anatomical correctness and image quality.
Negative Prompt
Tells the AI what to avoid generating. Prevents common AI artifacts and unwanted styles.