Showstars - Lora 01 -mummy — Edit-.25
There is a specific magic that happens when you push a LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation) to its decimal points. It’s not about the 1.0 or the 0.5; it’s about the strange, liminal space where the AI doesn’t quite know what to do with your request—so it gets creative.
The most obvious effect is specular reduction . Skin loses its oily sheen. Fabrics look brittle. Cotton looks like it has been stored in a tomb for 3,000 years. It is the texture of a museum artifact, not a living person.
April 17, 2026 Category: AI Art & Model Tuning Reading Time: 4 minutes showstars - lora 01 -mummy edit-.25
At , the result is not a monster. It is a haunting . The skin doesn't rot; it merely dries . The bandages don't wrap the face; they fray at the edges of the sleeves. Visual Analysis: The Output of ShowStars 01 We ran 48 seeds using the ShowStars base model with the LoRA applied at strength: 0.25 (the absolute value matters here). The results defy easy categorization:
It proves that the best AI edits aren't the ones that scream the loudest. They are the ones that sit quietly at a quarter strength, waiting for you to notice the dust on the lens. There is a specific magic that happens when
At this specific weight, the LoRA introduces a subtle split in the red and green channels around the edges of the frame. It looks less like a bad lens and more like the degradation of a Polaroid.
Have you tried negative weight LoRAs? Let us know your strangest results in the comments below. Skin loses its oily sheen
Behind the Render: Unpacking "ShowStars – LoRA 01 – Mummy Edit -.25"
Docked points for lack of versatility, but awarded full marks for atmosphere. Download: Available now on Civitai / Hugging Face (Search: ShowStars LoRA 01) Next Week Preview: LoRA 02 – "Cryptid Glow" (Tested at +0.75)
A negative weight doesn't remove the concept entirely; it inverts it. You are telling the model: "Do not show me the full mummy, but do not forget it entirely."
But if you want the feeling of a cursed archive—images that look like they were found in a lead coffin, opened briefly, and then sealed again—this is the tool.
