I’m saying it because it’s not only obvious with even a moments thought (you can literally just ask it for an entirely red image or whatever), but also because it’s easily provable.
Prompt: “Under the sea”
Image:
Average pixel colour:
Prompt: “a man with red hair wearing a red coat standing in front of a red background”
Image:
Average pixel colour:
So I ask you the same question. Did you just say that because you felt like it was true?
The average brightness values of those are both middle of the road grey. Sorry I should have rephrased as I misspoke calling it beige but the point still stands that has the most average toned color.
If you look they are middling around 50-60% where as a similar red photo intake would likely have a higher contrast and an average color with a higher brightness.
I’d expect that many images are going to be somewhere near 50% grey if you average their luminance out overall. That’s just the average of every colour though. The fact that averaging a range of things tends toward a standard distribution isn’t particularly surprising. Again though, it’s not hard to get a diffusion model to generate something outside of that expectation.
Prompt: “night sky”
Image:
Average colour:
Average brightness: 21%
Prompt: “lineless image of an old man drawn in yellow ink on white background”
Ehhh you’d be surprised how much small highlights and true dark values will skew an average.
You don’t really get blown out or completely under exposed parts of AI generated images. It keeps trying to add some saturation.
I will say I’m getting different brightness levels than you are but it’s not a big deal. Point made.
However I will say saturation is also pretty much 50% across the board for all the colors so maybe there is something there to use as an indicator. The average color always comes out grey toned somehow.
Testing it myself has been pretty spot on.
Just to point it out, here is a photo I took to mimic the red man. And the color average from it.
It doesn’t even have the highlights of the face and yet it’s already much brighter and has a much higher saturation.
Just saying that because you feel like it’s true or because you’ve participated in that line of thought for even 5 seconds?
AI images come from a noise map, it’s true cause they generate from it in a consistent manner.
I’m saying it because it’s not only obvious with even a moments thought (you can literally just ask it for an entirely red image or whatever), but also because it’s easily provable.
Prompt: “Under the sea”
Image:
Average pixel colour:
Prompt: “a man with red hair wearing a red coat standing in front of a red background”
Image:
Average pixel colour:
So I ask you the same question. Did you just say that because you felt like it was true?
The average brightness values of those are both middle of the road grey. Sorry I should have rephrased as I misspoke calling it beige but the point still stands that has the most average toned color.
If you look they are middling around 50-60% where as a similar red photo intake would likely have a higher contrast and an average color with a higher brightness.
I’d expect that many images are going to be somewhere near 50% grey if you average their luminance out overall. That’s just the average of every colour though. The fact that averaging a range of things tends toward a standard distribution isn’t particularly surprising. Again though, it’s not hard to get a diffusion model to generate something outside of that expectation.
Prompt: “night sky”
Image:
Average colour:
Average brightness: 21%
Prompt: “lineless image of an old man drawn in yellow ink on white background”
Image:
Average colour:
Average brightness: 90%
Ehhh you’d be surprised how much small highlights and true dark values will skew an average. You don’t really get blown out or completely under exposed parts of AI generated images. It keeps trying to add some saturation.
I will say I’m getting different brightness levels than you are but it’s not a big deal. Point made.
However I will say saturation is also pretty much 50% across the board for all the colors so maybe there is something there to use as an indicator. The average color always comes out grey toned somehow.
Testing it myself has been pretty spot on.
Just to point it out, here is a photo I took to mimic the red man. And the color average from it.
It doesn’t even have the highlights of the face and yet it’s already much brighter and has a much higher saturation.