Zoof looked everywhere he could think of. He slowed down and began searching for him, thinking perhaps Floz fell in the undergrowth and roots of the forest floor. Zoof ran and ran but he could not find Floz. “Faster, faster!”, Floz said to Zoof.īut Floz was faster than Zoof, and he ran so fast that Zoof couldn’t see where he went. They were enjoying themselves, running with all their heart, to and fro across the forest floor. Two bunnies named Zoof and Floz went into the woods to play. From deep within the realms of our shared creative providence, I present to you:Īn epic tweetstory of 23 parts drawn by DALL-E #dalle2 #dalle #aiart, written by the narrator. It’s not often you get to witness the birth of a timeless AI illustrated classic. I think a little history was made here but I’m not sure! A Bunnies Tale If you like, you can visit the original Twitter Dalle illustration thread. But, we are witnessing something quite staggering here, so the inconsistencies are part of the charm and the mystique of what the amazing model and algorithm deep inside the “mind” of DALL-E has produced. The results are intriguing, but also not consistent in a way a professionally drawn set of illustrations would normally be. The point in not doing any editing was to test DALL-E’s ability to generate characters and scenery with some consistency from image to image. I’m only aware of one other story of mine, “ The Great Watermelon Conflagration” that precedes “A Bunnies Tale” by a week or two, as seen here below, that is also fully AI illustrated with no post-processing done to the images after DALL-E generated them. To my knowledge, this is one of the first fully AI illustrated stories (however small) created on the revolutionary DALL-E platform. I wanted to add a little context here to this original tweetstorm story I posted on Twitter earlier this year.
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