
I saw this cat mask hanging on a house door near Prospect Park awhile back. It reminded me of kitsune masks. Despite thinking the mask is cute, I was a little creeped out when I first saw it from a distance in the dark.

I saw this cat mask hanging on a house door near Prospect Park awhile back. It reminded me of kitsune masks. Despite thinking the mask is cute, I was a little creeped out when I first saw it from a distance in the dark.

In this Stable Diffusion made image of an anthropomorphic cat wearing a hoodie and jeans, we find the subject in a workshop surrounded by computer parts and multiple monitors. The main parts that needed repair with inpainting were his hoodie pull strings and what was displayed on the computer monitors (originally, the center one had a ghastly distorted face, but I was able to replace it with computer code). Also, almost all of the anthropomorphic cats need inpainting on the paws to make them look like real paws instead of fur-covered human hands and fingers.

This anthropomorphic cat letter carrier in the UK is one of many iterations that I’ve made with Stable Diffusion–attempting to make a true cat mail person in a distinctly UK setting (using terms like Oxfordshire to strengthen this aspect of the images).

This is a chill anthropomorphic cat wearing a streetwear outfit that I made using Stable Diffusion. It required some inpainting to remove a distorted logo. While the zipper’s distortion gives it away, I think it still turned out pretty good.

One of my favorite kinds of images to create with Stable Diffusion are those involving anthropomorphic cats. Here’s a cat as an astronaut aboard the International Space Station. It required a lot of inpainting for the star field and the Earth’s curvature. SD 1.5 models often have trouble with keeping track of a line, of say a table or in this case a celestial object, bisected by a foreground subject. The final image here isn’t perfect but it was as good enough for me.