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AI Assisted Artwork #10 Yorkshire Rose Card

chatgpt yorkshire rose card 20240508

As mentioned previously, I’ve declared that one of my creative goals for 2024 is to create at least 52 AI assisted/inspired artworks this year, using AI-generated images as a prompt for actual physical creative pieces. My most recent piece is a Yorkshire Rose card.

Using ChatGPT’s DALL-E, I gave it a prompt:

Please try to create a papercut greetings card of a Yorkshire Rose.

This is what it came up with on the first attempt:

As usual, my first reaction was “WOW”. But then my follow-up reaction was the realisation that:

1) these designs wouldn’t be very easy to recreate as physical objects, and

2) they were just white roses, rather than actual Yorkshire roses.

…so I had to try to teach DALL-E what a Yorkshire Rose was:

Thanks – those are lovely but they are just white roses rather than specifically Yorkshire roses. The Yorkshire rose is a traditional emblem of Yorkshire in the UK. It is usually shown as having 5 white inner petals and 5 white outer petals – usually with leaves in between the 5 outer petals. It is similar to a Tudor rose, but with all-white petals instead of some petals being red.

Here are the results:

Now we were getting somewhere! For some reason I wanted to create a card that actually said “Yorkshire” on it. So I asked DALL-E to include “Yorkshire” under the rose emblem. This fifth attempt was OK, but again would have been difficult to directly create as a physical card…

DALL-E 20240507 Yorkshire rose card fifth attempt

…but the sixth attempt was excellent (with – of course – the exception being that DALL-E mis-spelled the only word I’d asked it to include):

DALL-E 20240507 Yorkshire rose card sixth attempt

Bingo! I instantly loved this design, but there was still a lot of work to do before I could cut it out:

  • Obviously I needed to correct the spelling.
  • Some areas wouldn’t work as papercuts because they weren’t attached to any other parts of the card, so I needed to adapt them.
  • Because of the shadows in the image, I would need to create the image as several layers.

Creating the physical design

This time I opened the Linearity Curve image software, and drew lines around the elements of the design so I could create an SVG file to cut with my laser cutter. I cut it with the laser because I thought I might not be accurate enough if I did it by hand.

Here is the original image on the left, with my physical version of the card on the right:

How well did DALL-E follow my prompts?

As mentioned above, the AI image generator initially didn’t know what a Yorkshire Rose was. However, once I’d explained the concept it did an amazing job… although then it let itself down again by mis-spelling a specific word. The papercut element was great, though. So on the whole I’ll give DALL-E 8/10.

How close is the physical version to the original AI design?

I’m going to give myself 83%. The differences are:

  • I changed “YORKSHHIRE” to “YORKSHIRE”
  • I had to link some of the ‘orphaned’ design elements to other parts of the design so that they wouldn’t fall out when I cut them.
  • I couldn’t get the shadows/lighting the same as in the original image. (Some of the shadows seem difficult/impossible to achieve in the physical version, so I didn’t make too much of an effort trying to get them exactly right.)
  • To get the right-looking thickness of paper I had to use watercolour card rather than paper, but that’s got a bit more of a creamy colour than the bright paper of the original image.
  • The laser made brown marks on the edges of the card, so again I haven’t been able to match the brightness of the original image.

Elements where I just left the AI design and didn’t make any changes:

  • The shapes of the leaves and the rose.
  • The shapes of the individual letters.

Lessons learned

  1. When making a layered papercut, even if the pieces have already been cut out by laser it can still take a long time to position the pieces correctly so they can be glued into place.
  2. (Solution to point (1) above:) If it’s tricky to position the layers of designs on top of each other, etch the positions onto the backs of the other paper pieces. For example, I etched the outline of the leafy piece onto the back of the large rose piece. This made it much quicker to accurately glue the leaves into place.

Things I still need to learn or improve

  1. Is there a quicker way to automatically (but accurately) convert the JPG image into SVG shapes? I tried to use Curve’s ‘Autotrace’ function, but it wasn’t very accurate so I decided to draw around most of the shapes by hand (using an Apple pencil).
  2. If I get chance later, I might try to match the shadows more accurately, and maybe also try to cut from a thinner, whiter paper or card.

Homework:

  1. Create a specific Barnsley version of the card/artwork.
  2. Create a version with no text.
  3. Try to cut from thinner, whiter paper/card.

Thanks for reading this post. If you’ve got any suggestions of prompts or projects – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-assisted images – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.

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More Marquetry

Yorkshire rose coaster marquetry project - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

More marquetry news this week: I’ve won first prize in the “Beginners’ Applied” category of a marquetry competition – wow!

I’ve been really enjoying my membership of the Leeds Marquetry Group, and last week I entered their annual competition. I submitted the Yorkshire Rose coaster, which was the very first marquetry project that I’d ever completed (and which I wrote about in July here).

Yorkshire rose coaster marquetry project - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

I created the design myself, and based the petals on heart shapes. Then found a really pesky, tricky wood to cut it out of. (For such a therapeutic hobby, I do seem to find myself inventing a surprising number of new swear-words.) Then I covered the coaster with a heat-resistant and water-resistant melamine sealant, gave it to my dad as a birthday present, only to pinch it back again to enter it into the competition.

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New Hobby: Adventures in Marquetry

Yorkshire rose coaster marquetry project - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

This year (2022) I started a new hobby. I am now a marquetry enthusiast (in addition to all of my other craft addictions).

I moved house in 2021 (from the south to the north of England) during the covid lockdowns, so for a very long time I wasn’t able to start any new hobbies that involved seeing real people. But in February 2022 I was wishing for a new group or club to join in Yorkshire, and discovered that Leeds Marquetry Group were restarting their beginners’ sessions that very same week. So I signed up. And it turns out that marquetry is a brilliant pastime for me, because it seems to combine a lot of the skills that I’ve already been building up via my other crafts, over the years.

Through my papercutting experiments I’ve already learned how to use a scalpel to do some very intricate cutting…

papercut 224 - Chinese flower with horizontal scalpel - Kay Vincent LaserSister

…and through my lasercutting artworks I’ve learned some of the characteristics and limitations of working with different types of wood veneers:

LaserSister trademark logo as laser-cut marquetry heart - background removed

So marquetry basically involves a mash-up of my existing craft skills.

The very first project I completed was a Yorkshire Rose coaster:

Yorkshire rose coaster marquetry project - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

As with my papercutting projects there are quite a few errors that really jump out at me when I look at this piece, but overall I’m really pleased with it. I designed it myself (starting out with petals that were based on heart shapes) then cut it by hand, and there were some really challenging sections in it.

The best thing about Leeds Marquetry Group is that everyone is so friendly and helpful. In just a few months I’ve learned more about cutting, gluing, sanding and varnishing wood than I could have ever learned from books or the internet. I’m looking forward to learning even more, over the next year.