AI Cover Illustrations?

Ever one to try something new, I leaped on the AI-generated illustration wagon. I chose an ethical provider, one who has asked permission from those owning the rights to their photographs and one who pays when those photos are used in a mashup (Note: I licensed all of the pictures used in this blog). As you may or may not know, depending on your relationship with your covers, finding the perfect illustration or photograph can take endless hours of wandering through providers and then sometimes settling or buying rights to multiple photos and cobbling them together to create the cover you envisioned if you can. Sometimes, close is as good as you get.

So why not try AI?

I’m not only a trier; I’m a plunger in that I just plunge in without a thought and see where it takes me. As a consequence, there are now an alarming number of AI-generated illustrations of tipped-over horses and three armed men on the service I used. The provider says that images created will be offered to others. Oh, my!

This is what I learned while plunging — mind your clauses:

  1. Don’t ask this: In 1870s a young woman dressed in men’s clothing galloping a horse with three men through a snowstorm at a distance. What I got was a woman in a skirt galloping a horse followed by three men in a snowstorm. (abandoned)
  2. Or this: Three armed cowboys on horseback side by side in a snowstorm. Some good illustrations, except for those with the three-armed cowboys, you know what I mean. Perhaps one should say armed with rifles or guns. (abandoned)
  3. Or this: A team of four horses hauling a freightwagon at a gallop in a blizzard. What I asked for in the world of AI is a galloping freight wagon hauled by a team of horses hauling four horses in a blizzard. (abandoned – see picture)
  4. Or this: A freight wagon with a broken wheel behind a team of four horses tipped over in an icy snowy stream. What I got, and rightly so, was tipped over horses under a freight wagon in an icy stream. Too gruesome to share. (abandoned)
  5. Close, but no cigar. Learning, I requested:  A 1870s brown-haired, clean-shaven man in a derby hat on a horse with a doctor’s bag in a snowstorm. A wonderful illustration came up. The man even had a distressed look on his face, which was perfect. I thought I had a live one until I realized the doctor’s bag was sitting unattached at the back of the horse.
  6. So, here is the evolution of prompts that led to two illustrations that met my needs. This isn’t to say there weren’t others that were good, just not right. Notice the order and precision of the description that resulted in my final choices (** indicates the two I kept for possible use).
    • An 1870s man reaching for black cowboy hat floating in nearly dry stream
    • An 1870s man in a white shirt reaching for black cowboy hat floating in nearly dry stream (picture 1 **).
    • An 1870s man in a white shirt reaching for black cowboy hat stuck in bushes on the banks of a stream
    • An 1870s man in a white shirt pulling a black cowboy hat from bushes on the banks of a stream (picture 2). Note weird dent in the crown of the hat.
    • A 1870s man in his twenties wearing a cowboy hat and a white shirt with his sleeves rolled up retrieving a Stetson caught in the brush along a slow flowing stream. Serious beefcake. Also, there is no hat on his head, and I’m not sure what he is retrieving. But he sure is pretty! (picture 3)
    • A 1870s man in his twenties wearing a white shirt with rolled up sleeves retrieving a Stetson by the brim caught in the brush along a slow flowing stream (picture 4 **).

Summary

In the final analysis, I was pleased with the results and glad I had chosen an ethical AI service for my plunge. As my character Cora Countryman (Unbecoming a Lady, A Confluence of Enemies, and the upcoming One Horse Too Many) would say, I do not truck with pirating the work of authors and illustrators without their knowledge or reward.

Find my books at https://dzchurch.com or on Amazon.

5 thoughts on “AI Cover Illustrations?

  1. What a fascinating article. I loved reading it, seeing what you asked for, and, ultimately, what you got. Very interesting. The funniest one is, of course, the four horses pulling a wagon with four more horses inside. It’s very funny. But it does beg the question of how much does AI serve us when we know what to ask for and look for, and how much does it infringe on our creative talent? I am actually for AI. I think it can be a very useful tool and I try to use it as much as I can when I need it. Right now I am using the dictating program because I’ve broken my left wrist, I cannot type, and I can’t write with my right hand. I’m left-handed. So I’m at AI’s mercy. Anyway, a great article. I enjoyed reading it. A lot of food for thought. Thank you, Dawn.

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  2. I love reading this kind of piece because, first, it makes me LOL, so thank you for that. Second, I learn all the pitfalls to avoid, if I were to take the plunge, as you put it, and try AI. Fortunately , I have a cover designer because I have no talent in that area and enjoy seeing what others come up with. But even more, I’m still very wary about how AI is infiltrating creative work even when we don’t know it or don’t want it to. Thank you for the lesson and the laughs.

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  3. While it is tempting to go the easy route and use AI for covers, and I admit my cover designer used it on Cougar’s Cache for the cougar, I don’t plan on using it because I when you have to click the “I used AI” button on the vendor sites, they don’t ask if it was for the cover or the interior. And I don’t want readers to think I am not using my own ideas and words in my books. but this was a great way to see how it does and doesn’t work. Did you notice the extra fingers on the hunky guy?

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    1. I, too, worry about the question asked by vendors. What are they really asking? For instance, if the cover designer uses one AI element in an otherwise human designed cover, is the cover AI? I would say no, the design itself was created by a human. But if I’m wrong, how is that different from cropping, filtering and removing the background from a photo then using it with another photo to create a combined element used on the cover? That, too, is artificial. And, yes, the hunk has a few too many fingers.

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