Prompt: Vector charcoal abstract art of a beautiful young woman, posing sensually, dressed in vintage attire, with a romantic and sexy aura, set against a soft, whimsical backdrop of pastel colors, reminiscent of Jean-Baptiste Monge's dreamy scenes, Simon Stålenhag's nostalgic mood, and Brian Froud's intricate details, with a perfect, curves-emphasizing silhouette, à la Piotr Jabłoński's stylish portraits, and the delicate, ethereal quality of Josephine Walls' artwork.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "At the Traffic Light of Dreams"
Foreground: A ginger-haired girl stands at a crosswalk, right at the edge of the sidewalk. In her hand, she holds a bouquet of sunflowers and wild lavender, wrapped in an old newspaper page. Her hair is tied in a messy ponytail, blowing in the gusts of wind. On her right cheek, the trace of tears wiped away by the wind. She's wearing headphones, but her gaze is distant — staring straight through the traffic light. On her sneakers, chalk-written: “I’ll be okay.”
Middle ground: The traffic light flickers between red and yellow as cars pass behind her in a blurred streak of motion. The walls of nearby buildings reflect neon ad lights in hues of blue, turquoise, and pink — like glazing layers brushed across a dream. In the shop window behind her: a mannequin in a wedding dress, smiling, unmoving.
Background: A bluish city skyline soaked in morning mist, birds circling above the tram station. In the distance, a neon café sign flickers: “The Dreamer.” On a faraway rooftop, someone is hanging laundry — white sheets swaying like flags of surrender and hope.
Color palette: Warm peach and honey tones on the girl and the bouquet, with cold blue-violet shadows stretching across the asphalt. Red and yellow reflections from the traffic light cross her figure like a painted feeling of being torn — done in impasto technique, with thick, emotional strokes.
Atmosphere: A frozen moment of decision. She knows she has to move — but isn't sure there's still anywhere to go. The flowers in her hands are not a gift, but a reminder. The city breathes — but she stands still, waiting for the green light not on the signal, but within herself.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “Rain Signs”
Foreground: A ginger-haired girl stands under a streetlamp at the corner of an old cobblestone street. Raindrops cling to her worn leather jacket; her hood is down — she lets her hair fall, wet and tangled, across her face. In her right hand, she holds a canvas bag with an old film camera peeking out. Her left hand is buried in her pocket, clenched.
Midground: Behind her, the window of a vintage bookstore glows dimly. Handwritten across the glass: “We close at 9 PM — or when someone finds the word they’re missing.” The raindrops on the glass blur the letters, as if the storefront itself is crying. A white cat with a black tail sits by the door, staring straight at her.
Background: The street disappears slowly into fog, but far off, two figures walk beneath a single umbrella. Above them, the lights of a passing tram stretch in motion, like a brushstroke pulled across wet canvas. The sky is glazed in deep indigo and violet hues.
Techniques: Impasto on the rain droplets and reflections on the cobblestones. Palette knife used for the jacket’s texture, streetlamp glow, and her soaked hair. Glazing adds depth to the fog, glass, and distant lights. The scene is urban, melancholic, emotionally layered — a gallery piece.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “She Who Walks the City That Whispers”.
In the foreground, reflections of city lights shimmer on damp asphalt — scattered like sentences no one had the courage to speak. At the center of the canvas stands a young ginger-haired girl, her slender figure in motion, walking through a side street in an oversized cobalt-blue coat, twisting in the wind like a flag of personal freedom. Her hair, wild and fiery, dances with the breeze — a palette of oranges and copper tones, applied with a bold palette knife, radiating movement.
She carries a skateboard in one hand, scratched and sticker-covered, while her eyes gaze somewhere undefined — not at us, but beyond us — and yet they speak, quietly and clearly, like a city street at 4 a.m. A soft golden glaze falls across her cheek from a nearby shop window, capturing a fleeting warmth, like someone accidentally brushed light onto her skin.
In the middle ground, the cracked walls around her are covered in graffiti — not angry, but story-driven. One reads: “City forgets, but I remember,” faded in worn-out blue spray paint. A bicycle leans against the wall, missing its back wheel, abandoned like an old promise. A nearby café window is fogged with steam; inside, someone plays the piano — but you don’t hear it. The canvas is silent.
A tilted streetlamp casts a dull orange glow, breaking her shadow unevenly across the scene. The textures here are heavy and layered — impasto strokes for the brick, harsh and tactile — while the glass surfaces are rendered in smooth, translucent glazes of ultramarine and pale grey.
In the background, the city horizon reveals no skyscrapers, just the silhouettes of low rooftops, telephone lines, and a bridge dissolving into fog. The sky is textured in dirty lilacs, steel greys, and soft remains of sunlight — a blend of pale gold and dusky pink.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "Ginger in the Wind of a Belgrade Evening"
Foreground: A young ginger woman leans against the wall of an old building in a Belgrade street, somewhere near Kalemegdan. The wind tousles her unruly hair across her shoulders. In her hand, she holds a vintage film camera. She wears an oversized men’s blazer from a thrift shop — the sleeves too long — paired with tall black combat boots. Her gaze is fixed on the neon reflection in a nearby window, as if searching for someone from the past.
Midground: A small café with a few metal chairs outside, lit by a retro sign in red neon that reads: “One More Coffee.” Two students are deep in conversation, a waiter carries a towel over his shoulder, and an older woman in a vintage hat sips slowly. The crowd is in motion — blurred — while the ginger girl stands still, frozen in time. A stray dog lies at her feet, looking up at her now and then, as if guarding her.
Background: A cracked and fading wall full of graffiti and peeling paint, with one sentence still visible.
Techniques: Impasto: The woman’s hair and the wall’s texture are painted in thick, expressive strokes. Mixing Palette Knife: Urban elements — the street, the graffiti, the light — are roughly blended, alive with layered emotion. Glazing: Light reflections, neon glow on wet surfaces, and soft mist are rendered in transparent veils of color.
Color Palette: Warm reddish hues – her hair, café signs, glimmers in the window. Muted gray-blues – the city street, walls, reflections. Gold highlights – in the light, her eyes, and faint inner glow. Deep greens and navy tones – clothing, shadows, background depth.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The Pause Before the Jazz”
Style: Emotional realism with subtle surreal overtones
At the edge of a golden evening, in a frame frozen just before the music begins, stands a young ginger girl — barefoot on the cracked floorboards of an old jazz bar. Her hair, loose and glowing like copper in the sun, catches the light from the display window, scattering it across the walls in shades of orange and antique gold.
With impasto strokes, the walls are rendered like waves of shadow and smoke — textured to feel like notes that haven't happened yet. On her cheek lies a soft window of light, glazed in layers of amber, her half-closed eyelids as if waiting for rhythm to pull her in.
In her right hand, she holds a vintage vinyl, her fingers stained with ultramarine and burnt sienna — as if she had just finished playing the double bass. Her face is calm, but her eyes burn: a look turned inward. At the center of the canvas, the palette knife textures along the hem of her skirt create the illusion of movement that hasn’t begun — wind in the fabric that comes from within, from a rhythm about to swell.
On the floor, in the corner — the shoes she just took off. Across them, the shadow of a saxophone yet to be played. From some invisible place, yellow and cobalt blue clash: two instruments, in silence, in color — as if already performing. The entire scene is a moment of expectancy: everything is ready to begin, and yet it hasn’t. She knows the first note will strike the moment she closes her eyes. And so — she waits.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “She Who Dances When No One Sees”
(Mixing Palette Knife for sunlit dust particles and wall texture, Impasto for hair and movement of fabric, Glazing to catch fleeting light through windows)
In an abandoned greenhouse on the edge of the city, broken glass lets sunlight pour in like spilled honey. Wild ivy has claimed the metal ribs of the structure, and dust dances in every forgotten corner — but she moves as if it’s her stage.
The ginger girl — barefoot again, always barefoot — spins slowly in the golden light. Her white linen dress flares out with each turn, slightly torn at the edges, catching on the wind like a memory refusing to fade. Her hair, ablaze in the sun, lifts with her motion, forming a halo made of copper threads and rebellion.
There’s no music. Only the rhythmic tapping of her feet on cracked stone tiles. But in her mind — there is a symphony. A full orchestra echoing through the silence. Her hands rise like wings, her breath shallow, quick, real. She dances not for someone, not even for herself — but for the space.
Palette: amber, rust, deep emerald. Light carved with Glazing technique enters through high broken windows, slipping over her skin like soft rain. Knife strokes drag along the floor, textured with shadows that remember. Impasto gives volume to her body in motion — her presence painted with thick, confident strokes, refusing to disappear.
Her face is turned upward, but her eyes are closed. A quiet smile flickers across her lips — the kind that appears when you're fully alive, if only for a second.
And just before she stops, she opens her eyes — and catches her own reflection in a shard of broken glass stuck in the dirt.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The One Who Remains”
(Mixing Palette Knife for the clouded sky, Glazing for water reflections, Impasto for the texture of skin and hair)
At dusk, on a worn-out wooden pier, stands a young ginger girl — barefoot, with the torn hem of her skirt dancing in the wind. The sea behind her pulses like a heart — gray-blue, crumpled like a thought too heavy to say aloud. The sun sinks, but not quickly — it drags, resists, painting the sky in gold and blood.
Her hair — a flame of copper and fire — spills over her shoulders, clashing gently with the chill in the air. In her hands, an old film camera — but she’s not shooting. She’s just looking through it, searching for a frame that might not exist. Her eyes are half-closed — not from the light, but from memory.
On her lips: a smear of cherry juice, imperfect, ungraceful — like life itself. In one hand, a folded piece of paper, edges soft and wet. She’s not sure if it’s sea spray or tears.
In the frame: light filters through her lashes. In the picture, she looks like she’s crying — but there’s no proof. Not of sadness, not of joy. Only light.
Color palette: deep blues touched with burnt orange and wine red. Bold knife strokes trace the curve of her back — fragile, yet unyielding. The Glazing layers make the sea look eerily calm, until you look closer — and realize everything is boiling beneath.
She’s not leaving. Not running. Not searching. She is the still point in the noise of the world.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “Ginger on the Rooftop, Just Before Rain”
Foreground: On the edge of a rooftop terrace in an old downtown building stands a young ginger-haired woman, barefoot, wrapped in a long wine-colored satin robe fluttering in the wind like a flag. In her hand, she holds a crumpled letter — the ink partially smudged by raindrops that have already started to fall. Her face — calm yet resolute — gazes toward the horizon, with a single tear tracing her cheek, left unbrushed. Midground: Around her, scattered signs of daily life: a coffee cup, an old radio playing soft jazz, several Polaroid photos taped to the concrete wall, and a glowing neon billboard pulsing in reds and oranges. The wind stirs a clothesline — a white shirt flutters like a flag of hope. Background: The city skyline just before the rain. The sky is a moody blend of violet and navy, like a blurred watercolor painting, and thunder rumbles behind the clouds. Traffic lights shimmer through the drops on the lens — red, green, orange — like spilled ink on canvas. In the far distance, Mount Avala is barely visible, wrapped in misty gray.
Artistic Techniques: Impasto: Thick expressive strokes in the clouds and the motion of the robe and hair. Mixing Palette Knife: A mix of harsh and soft textures on the rooftop surfaces, walls, and neon reflections. Glazing: Subtle transparent layers for the rain, skin glow, and depth of atmosphere.
Color Palette: Burgundy and deep red – robe, emotional highlights, reflected light. Dusty gray and ultramarine – sky, rooftop, background tones. Golden yellow accents – Polaroids, radio glow, skin detail. Lavender and graphite – mist, distant buildings, shadows.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The Red Hat in Morning Stillness”
Style: Emotional realism with lyrical symbolism
At dawn, while the city still sleeps, a ginger-haired girl sits alone at the edge of a fountain in a deserted square. She wears a wide-brimmed red hat, its shadow gently falling across her face. Everything around her is washed in pale blues and greys — but she is the single point of color in a world not yet ready to wake.
Her hair is tousled, like a quiet flame, shaped with Impasto strokes to appear almost three-dimensional, as if it breathes with the wind. In her hands, she holds a worn-out postcard, faded, touched by rain and time. There’s no smile on her face — just something softer, deeper. A summoning.
Using the Glazing technique, layers of light shimmer across her eyes: muted gold and pearly violet. Around her, Palette Knife textures sculpt the uneven stone of the square, fractured shadows, and reflections glinting off shuttered windows behind her.
On her shoulder, a bird has landed — perhaps a dove, perhaps a symbol. She doesn’t react. Everything in her is composed, still, yet subtly moving: a stillness that contains an entire orchestra of thought.
She is not waiting for anyone. She is remembering.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “At the Edge of Evening and Eyes”
Style: Emotional realism with quiet longing
On the rooftop at dusk, a ginger-haired girl sits right on the edge. Her legs dangle freely over the side, as if the ground below doesn’t concern her. She wears a light beige shirt, sheer like a thought, and faded denim jeans — like someone who walked straight out of a song yet to be written.
In her hands, she turns a lighter — not lighting it, just feeling its shape. The wind plays with her hair — scattered copper strands that, in the sun’s dying light, look like they were layered with a palette knife, stroke by stroke, while the sky kisses the horizon. Her eyes aren’t downcast — they look straight ahead, but not at the city below. She’s looking at the unseen — at what hasn’t happened, but could.
The impasto clouds behind her are more than backdrop — they are mood: pressed thick, dense, like unspoken words. Her shadow on the wall trembles gently, glazed in layers of orange and violet, softly merging with the color of the sky. On her wrist, a small tattoo — a bird in flight. Barely visible. Like a decision not yet made.
And in that moment, everything holds. Even the light.
She is the center of the frame. And she doesn’t move.
Because she knows — if she stands up, something will disappear.
And if she stays, maybe... maybe something might begin.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “While the Wind Forgets Its Name”
Style: Poetic realism with static tension
At an abandoned train platform, beneath a flickering neon light that seems unsure of itself, stands a ginger-haired girl. Alone — but not lost. In her hand, she holds a black umbrella — closed, even though the light rain softly dampens her pale cotton jacket.
Her hair, heavy with moisture, clings to her face in copper strands that follow the contour of her cheekbones like bold palette knife strokes. In her eyes — a silent drama, as if she's waiting for something she knows won’t come, but she stays anyway. Impasto raindrops shimmer on her eyelashes, as though the light is trying to say: “This is you, too.”
In the background, a wall with a peeling poster, glazed with layers of faded years, and in the foreground — her figure, perfectly balanced between fragility and defiant presence. On the strap of her backpack hangs an old pin — its smile faded, but still visible.
In that moment, she’s not looking at the train. She’s looking through it. And through everything.
As if saying to herself: “There is no arrival I need, if I’ve already left myself behind.”
And still, she stands. She waits. Not for rescue. But for truth.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The One Who Belongs to No One”
At the center of the painting stands a young ginger-haired woman, turned in half-profile. Her hair — wild, glistening under the city lights — spills over her back in a dense motion, as if the wind has just passed through. She wears an oversized velvet coat in deep shadow tones, where reds, purples, and navy blues shimmer under the light like secrets surfacing. Her face is gentle, yet untamed. Her eyes gaze above the city — toward a place where no street leads. Her lips are slightly parted, like she's about to speak, but changed her mind. Behind her, fragmented neon signs from cafés and late-night ads burn in yellows, greens, and cool pinks — painted with fast impasto strokes that flicker like nerve endings. The ground beneath her glows with a thin reflective glaze — as if she’s walking on her own thoughts. In her right hand, she holds an old tape recorder. In the left — nothing, but her fingers are slightly curled, as if she dropped something minutes ago. And she’s unsure whether to go back for it… or let it be lost forever. On her right cheek, barely visible, is the faded shape of a hand — not quite a slap, not quite a caress. More like the echo of someone who was once there. Above the entire composition hovers a transparent layered aura, bluish and light, created with palette knife smudging — like the ungraspable thought of what it would feel like to finally belong to someone. But she stands still. At a crossroads with no signs. And goes nowhere. Because she’s already been everywhere.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The Street That Remembers Rivers”
At dusk, a ginger-haired girl stands barefoot on the warm pavement of an old city street.
Her long hair is tied in a messy bun, with curly strands escaping and catching the last golden rays of sunlight.
She’s wearing faded men’s suspenders trousers, rolled up to the ankles, and a loose white linen shirt — like she stumbled into a time that no longer exists.
In her right hand: a crumpled old letter. In her left: a tiny baby outfit, neatly folded. Beside her, a manhole exhales steam — the hot breath of the city.
Her eyes look straight into the camera: tearful, but not dramatic. Just life. Just truth.
Behind her, a flickering neon sign reads Hotel Danube, blinking like it’s breathing.
The background is soaked in warm amber tones of sunset, but in the corners of the painting, a deep blue starts to bleed in — night is coming.
On the wet asphalt, her reflection breaks in a puddle — and in that ripple, you glimpse another world:
her, smiling, barefoot in the sand, holding a baby in her arms. A shadow of what could be.
Technique Breakdown: Mixing Palette Knife – used in the background for city textures and the dramatic sky — blending light and shadow like her inner world.
Impasto – thick, expressive strokes for her hair, the letter, the baby clothes, and the folds of her shirt — you can feel their texture.
Glazing – for layering light over the puddle, the neon glow on her skin, the cinematic shimmer in the atmosphere.
Dry Brush + Fine Detailing – used on her face, eyelashes, fingertips — those small details that whisper: this is a real person.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The Silence Before the Blast”
A ginger-haired girl sits on the roof of an old cinema.
The sky behind her cracks in orange and grey — as if day and night are arguing over who gets to stay. Her legs dangle over the edge, bare, smudged with city dust and broken bits of red brick.
Her hands are stretched behind her, palms pressing into the warm rooftop — but the tension in her fingers gives her away. Nothing in her is truly at ease.
Her hair flies in all directions — the wind painted in layered palette knife strokes, creating a feeling of motion and subtle unrest. She's wearing a grey sweater with small holes, and beneath it peeks a worn-out t-shirt with a half-hidden phrase — only the words "burn" and "truth" are visible.
In her gaze, fixed on the horizon, there’s no sadness — but there is something dangerously aware. As if she knows there’s a fire inside her that could blow out both walls and people — but she’s waiting for the right moment.
To her right, there's a small can full of ashes and scorched paper — it looks like she burned something five minutes ago. Maybe letters. Maybe dreams.
Hovering above the entire scene, in translucent glazed layers, are sentences no one hears: "I don’t create chaos, I survive it." "I’m not chasing the end, I’m chasing the truth." "If I explode — it will be silent." In the background, the city collapses into dark palette knife strokes, like the painting itself is dimming — but she stays. Not as a savior. Not as a victim. But as someone who knows how to wait for the silence before the blast.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "The Baby Clothes She Never Got to Use"
At the center of the composition, a ginger-haired woman sits on the edge of a bed in an old city apartment. It's evening, and the only light in the room is a soft table lamp, rendered through glazing, casting a warm, dreamlike glow.
In her lap — a tiny baby outfit, folded neatly, untouched. The fabric is painted in impasto technique, thick textured strokes that almost breathe the silence: the longing, the pause, the dream that didn’t arrive.
Around her, an unopened crib, sealed boxes. The walls behind her are restless, done with palette knife in streaks of muted green and grey — as if the walls themselves hold their breath with her.
Her copper hair falls softly over one shoulder. She stares at the baby clothes, but it’s not the fabric she sees — it’s the life imagined but never lived. The light glazes her shoulders in amber and gold, freezing the moment in quiet reverence.
On the window — her shadowed hand, caught in hesitation: to hold on, or to let go.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: In the ruins of an old cathedral without a roof, a ginger-haired girl sits on a thin layer of still water — but it’s not ordinary water. It’s a surface created with glazing technique, capturing the golden light of the day’s last sunrays. That light doesn’t fall straight; it slides across her cheek like a sfumato whisper — soft, elusive, as if time itself wants to touch her.
Her hair, tousled and copper-bright, gently sticks to her face — its texture formed with uneven strokes of impasto, where each strand seems to tell its own story. In her lap — an open atlas showing a map of a world that doesn’t exist, its lines breaking under her fingers, drawn with dry brush detail, thin and precise like thoughts left unspoken.
Beside her, an old velvet suitcase stands — its fabric shaped with palette knife, rough and silent, as if someone carved their way through the past not with gentleness, but with resistance. From the suitcase peeks paper feathers, satin ribbons shaped into a bird, and handwritten letters — the only legible one reads: “Don’t go where you know. Go where your heart pounds.”
In her right hand, she holds a small key, painted with amber-like glaze, but it opens nothing visible. In front of her — nothing but a flock of birds flying without formation. Their movement in the sky is etched with knife strokes, as if someone tried to paint the sound of dissonance.
Yet she — is calm. She looks into the distance, while her reflection in the water — looks straight at us.
The silence around her is not empty. It resonates. Because the world is noise. But silence — knows.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques:“When Fire Waits by the Window”
A ginger-haired girl sits by a tall window in a dim room, wrapped in the late afternoon silence.
Her oversized corduroy coat slides off one shoulder, revealing pale skin freckled like stardust —
(glazing technique) captures the softness of the fading light touching her collarbone, with golden warmth melting through layered amber tones.
Behind her, the wall is textured thick with time —
(impasto strokes) form a rich tapestry of peeling turquoise and ochre,
each stroke carrying whispers of forgotten laughter, dried flowers, and past winters.
The light from the window hits the copper in her hair —
(mixing palette knife) blends bold streaks of cinnabar, rust, and deep red into a crown of quiet fire,
making her head glow like an ember that refuses to die.
In her lap, she holds a tiny white onesie, stitched by hand.
One finger traces the edge slowly, like she’s remembering a future that hasn't happened yet.
Her eyes — sea-glass green — are fixed somewhere outside,
but her whole being is here — suspended, still,
in that moment between breath and choice.
Behind the glass, it begins to snow —
but she doesn’t move.
She just waits,
while the fire in her hair
keeps the room alive.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “Silence Before the Downpour”
On the wooden porch of an old house, beneath a sky as crumpled as linen,
a ginger girl stands barefoot, a coat in her hand.
Her hair is tousled by the wind —
rendered with palette knife strokes, strands shaped like flames dancing,
shades of copper and orange layered with dynamic, untamed motion.
A drop slides down her cheek — but it’s not rain yet —
just the air, thick with foreboding.
The entire scene is brushed with glazing — the light glimmers faintly,
tones blurred and damp, like a memory caught in the throat.
Behind her, the walls are scarred by time —
impasto textures reveal whispers, sorrow, and some long-lost laughter.
On the porch column, an empty birdcage swings gently.
Its door hangs open.
She gazes at the sky, but her eyes aren’t really there —
they drift somewhere between what could’ve been and what never will.
In her hand — a faded postcard, without a stamp, as if from a dream.
In the next moment, the first raindrops fall,
but she doesn’t move.
She remains.
Still.
Like oil on canvas.
Like a hope that doesn’t know it’s late.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The Silence She Wears”
Foreground: A ginger girl stands barefoot on cool bathroom tiles, wrapped only in his oversized white shirt, damp from the moisture in the air. She looks into the mirror, applying red lipstick with a trembling hand.
Impasto technique brings her copper curls to life, textured and luminous, almost reaching out of the canvas. Her lips and neck are sculpted in thick paint, capturing the tension of this quiet ritual.
Middle ground: A fogged-up mirror reflects only fragments of her face. Behind her, water droplets continue to trail down the glass. On the shelf below: an old hairbrush, a perfume bottle without a cap, and a crumpled letter.
Glazing is used to veil the mirror with layered mist, blurring the line between the real and imagined. The mirror becomes a threshold between who she is and who she longs to be.
Background: The open shower door releases a thin stream of steam. The bathroom walls are textured in cold grays and faded blues — built using Mixing Palette Knife technique, cracked and rough like old memories.
Title: “When I Want to Be Someone Else”
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “A Room Without a Clock”
Foreground: A ginger girl lies diagonally across the bed, head hanging over the edge, her red hair cascading down like a silk flame. She’s still wearing a sleep mask she forgot to remove. Her arms are stretched out like wings, and a blue ink smudge stains her right palm.
Impasto in her limbs and hair adds weight and softness — she appears caught mid-drift between rest and restlessness.
Middle ground: On the nightstand: a half-empty coffee cup, a book lying face down, and an old silent phone. Sunlight filters through the blinds, striping her stomach with warm gold lines.
Glazing technique renders the light delicate and suspended, turning the room into a silent film of stillness. Each shadow is gently washed, uncertain if the day should come in.
Background: The wall behind her is covered in hand-written notes — some scratched out, some only dots in a row. The entire back wall is painted using Mixing Palette Knife — textures of graffiti, faded chalk, and ghost colors.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “The Night She Didn’t Send the Message”
Foreground: A ginger-haired girl sits on the floor of her room, back leaning against the bed. She’s wearing an old black hoodie with a faded print of a band she no longer listens to. Her knees are drawn to her chest, and in one hand she holds a phone with a black screen. Her gaze is blank, and a trembling cigarette burns between her lips, unsmoked.
Impasto technique highlights the tension in her hands, the soft folds of her hoodie, and the restless strands of hair stuck to her cheek. The texture of her skin and the ash of the cigarette feel thick and tactile — the silence is physically present.
Middle ground: Beside her, there’s a box full of letters she never sent. One letter is torn out, crumpled, but not thrown away. The ashtray is overflowing, and ashes scatter on the floor like a map of lost thoughts. A small transistor radio plays soft, crackling jazz nearby.
Glazing gives this area a translucent, dreamy hue. The ceiling light glows gently, wrapping the room in a quiet breath that doesn’t know whether it’s the end of something, or the beginning. Everything feels like a dream more real than life.
Background: On the wall behind her – old posters fading, and in between them, photos she developed herself: one from a road trip, another of a smile she no longer remembers. The window is slightly open; the curtains shift in the breeze, and faint sounds from the city leak in — distant, detached, almost foreign.
Mixing Palette Knife shapes the wall as a raw surface of emotion — scratched memories, layered regrets, painted over truths. The texture of the wall holds old anger, longing, and all the things left unsaid.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "The Silence Between the Notes"
Foreground (Mixing Palette Knife – textured and bold strokes): A ginger girl, pale skin, hair the color of aged copper cascading down her back, sits on a bar stool in a dimmed jazz club. Her left hand gently glides over a half-drunk glass of red wine, while her right holds a cigarette whose smoke curls like a musical note. Her eyes are not focused on anything — they’re gazing into the distance of silence.
Middle ground (Impasto – heavy texture of light and shadow): Thick velvet curtains in deep purple drape the background. A warm light from an unseen source falls across her shoulders and face — it seems she’s illuminated by a memory. On the piano lies a sheet of music, the corners fluttering in a breeze (or time itself?). A lonely microphone stands nearby — as if the song just ended, or has yet to begin.
Background (Glazing – layered tones, subtle depth):
The dark depth of the club reveals only outlines: the shape of a double bass in shadow, chairs that no one moves anymore, and the silhouette of a bartender frozen mid-pour. Everything appears to be waiting… for her to rise, to say something, to sing… but she remains in that silence between notes, between breath and gaze.
Overall impression: The painting pulses with gentle tension. The girl is like a muse from a forgotten song, and the entire scene smells of slow cigarette smoke, wine that no longer warms, and words left unsaid. Everything radiates an emotion that isn’t spoken — only felt.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “Sunday in an Empty Gallery”
Foreground (Mixing Palette Knife – vivid, dynamic strokes): A ginger-haired girl stands barefoot on the cold marble floor of an exhibition hall. A dress the color of dried roses drapes down to her ankles, one shoulder slipped—almost as if the fabric itself has grown tired of waiting. In one hand, she holds an old Polaroid camera; with the other, she gently touches the frame of a missing painting. Her face leans toward the blank space, as if trying to see what others cannot.
Middle ground (Impasto – textured surfaces, light emerging from material): The gallery walls are white but marked by old shadows. Remnants of tape, scratches from frames, footprints of artists who once stood there. Behind her, a small table cluttered with crumpled maps, handprints, and a single empty coffee cup—the only evidence the day ever began.
Background (Glazing – translucent layers, tones of silence): A large window opens to grey buildings. Rain gently trails down the glass, and the city outside seems to dissolve into watercolor. In the distance, a single figure in a coat walks away—perhaps an artist, a lover, or no one at all.
Overall impression: This scene captures the moment between what once was and what will never be. She isn’t looking at art—she’s searching for it in what has been lost. The emptiness of the gallery becomes the canvas of her own inner world. A quiet longing lingers—for a meeting, a hidden work, someone who didn’t arrive in time.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "The Silence Between the Notes"
Foreground – Mixing Palette Knife (dynamic texture, bold strokes): At the edge of a smoky jazz bar, a young ginger-haired woman sits at an old piano, dressed in a worn satin dress the color of wine. Her freckles glisten under the antique spotlight, and a lock of hair falls over her left eye as her fingers hover above the keys like she’s about to play a memory.
Color palette: deep burgundy, broken ochre, gold brushed with age. You can feel the weight of emotion in every stroke — each line carved with the palette knife as if her feelings were sculpted in paint.
Middle ground – Impasto (thick layers, expressive relief): Behind her, the walls are layered with jazz posters from the 1930s, painted thickly so they melt like time itself. On a small table rests a half-full whiskey glass, lipstick still staining the rim. Shadows of guests blur into the dark — no face is fully clear, because they’re all watching her. This part is tactile; you don’t just see it — you feel it.
Background – Glazing (transparent layers, dreamy atmosphere): In the distance, cigarette smoke swirls with golden light, like a memory returning in a dream. A man in a long coat leans quietly against the doorframe, unsure if he’s allowed to step into this moment. Everything is covered in a warm, translucent veil — the Glazing technique creates the sensation of looking through a dream from within.
Mood: The silence before the first note. She hasn’t played yet — her eyes are still closed. And in that instant, everything holds its breath: your lungs, their conversations, even the light. Because once she starts to play — nothing will be the same again.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “Sunset in Her Hair”
Foreground – Mixing Palette Knife (dynamic texture, light sliced through shape): At the top of an old Lisbon terrace, a ginger-haired girl sits barefoot on a concrete ledge. Her hair — like blazing orange silk — dances with the wind, and the sun sets right behind her. Her eyes don’t meet yours — they’re gazing into a distance that doesn’t hurt, but stings just enough. The brush is replaced by a palette knife — each stroke cuts through the light: her skin in young peach tones, her hair painted with crimson fire laced with lemon and amber.
Midground – Impasto (rich layers, emotional depth): Beside her — a blooming cactus in a tomato tin, painted with heavy texture, almost sculptural. Scattered on the concrete are torn pages of a journal, scribbled poems, and an empty glass of red wine. The light touches everything as if it knows it’s the last time — this is Impasto: paint applied thickly, like emotion no one dares to hide.
Background – Glazing (translucent tones, dreamy backdrop): Behind her — a sea of rooftops and a sky fading from apricot into lavender violet. With Glazing, translucent layers blur the scene into something still happening while already slipping away. Laundry sways gently on the lines, a pigeon lands and flies off again. Everything is softened by tenderness — as if the day itself refuses to leave while watching her.
Mood: It’s the kind of moment when someone doesn’t know they’re most beautiful — just by existing. You arrived by chance, but the whole world already knew you’d stop right there — to see her while the sunset writes a song into her hair.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "Ginger Summer – The Silence That Dances"
Mood: Warm summer day, witty silence, and inner peace in motion
Foreground: A ginger girl in a light linen romper sits on an old wooden chair in front of a hand-painted whitewashed wall. Her hair, a radiant copper blaze, spills over her shoulders like the sun in flames. One hand rests on a vintage camera in her lap, while the other casually holds a straw hat that’s slipped behind her head.
Her fingers are stained with acrylic paints—she was just painting on the canvas leaning against the wall beside her. Her eyes carry a gaze that watches the world closely, but from a gentle distance. The shadow of a nearby lavender plant breaks across her legs.
Impasto technique on her hair and clothes adds a tangible texture—you can almost touch the layers of color in her curls.
Midground: A small open-air atelier—her balcony facing the garden. Canvases propped up against the wall, brushes tossed into tin mugs, an open book on a nearby table with one sentence underlined:
"Not all who wander are lost."
Behind her, a white sheet is pinned to a clothesline, fluttering in the breeze. Here the light plays—glazing technique allows layers of sunrays to refract through the fabric and flow over the canvases, her face, and scattered objects.
Background: Through the open terrace window, the end of a summer garden reveals itself—patchy mowed grass, a bicycle leaned against a tree, and a dog napping lazily in the fig tree’s shade. All painted in green hues with golden undertones, rendered with mixing palette knife technique to resemble moving waves.
In the sky, shades of indigo and gold—a moment between late afternoon and early evening when nature holds its breath.
Emotional atmosphere of the painting: Calm, inspiration, quiet rebellion. The ginger girl is the embodiment of one who doesn’t chase the world, but creates it from within—free, untamed, her own. In that moment—the entire scene becomes a portrait of her soul.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "Whispers of Golden Hour"
Mood: Dreamy, cinematic, timeless moment caught between youth and solitude
Foreground: A barefoot ginger girl in a soft vintage dress stands in a shallow riverbed, her toes brushing the glistening stones beneath the water. The fabric clings slightly to her knees—wet, sunlit, weightless. She’s turned sideways, caught in motion, holding her shoes in one hand and letting the other skim the water’s surface. Her long, fiery hair fans out as a breeze lifts it—each strand thick with impasto texture, fiery orange and gold layered like burning threads of freedom.
Her freckles are kissed by the sun. She looks over her shoulder—not at the viewer, but toward something unknown beyond the frame, something only she can see.
Midground: The river flows gently under a low stone bridge, overgrown with ivy. Wildflowers dot the riverbanks—blues, purples, soft whites—done in palette knife strokes that make them shimmer with energy. A book lies open on a large flat stone, forgotten mid-read. Her journal is beside it, a pen resting across the spine like a pause in thought.
Sunlight flickers through the tall grass and glazes everything it touches—her arm, the water, the petals—with that magical golden haze of a summer’s end. Glazing technique enhances this glowing veil across the entire midground.
Background: Tall trees arc over the scene like cathedral walls, filtering light into dappled patterns on the earth. Behind them, in the distance, an old cabin with smoke curling from its chimney, nearly hidden in green. Birds fly in V-formation across a honey-toned sky. You can feel the hour winding down.
The entire background is layered in thinned oils with subtle palette blending, allowing shadow and light to merge like memory.
Emotional atmosphere of the painting: Stillness in motion. A story without words. The ginger girl stands between girlhood and womanhood, alone but not lonely. This is a portrait of freedom found in quiet moments. Of belonging to nature more than to people.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: “Whispers of Autumn”
Foreground (Impasto and palette knife): A ginger-haired girl in a burgundy wool cardigan sits on an old bench in an autumn park. Her hair dances in the wind, painted with deep orange and copper tones using thick, expressive strokes of the palette knife. Her icy-blue eyes shine as if holding the whole world inside. She holds an open notebook — its pages thickly textured, almost three-dimensional. Someone may be watching her or approaching — but she’s lost in her own world.
Middle ground (Glazing + golden palette): Autumn trees in harmonious brilliance — layered glazes of gold, ochre, and crimson give the foliage a luminous, transparent glow. Light filters through the leaves, filling the space between the girl and nature. There are faint outlines of passersby, children playing in the distance, and a bicycle leaning against a tree — all bathed in warm, melting light and shadow.
Background (Mixing Palette Knife with soft blending): A misty silhouette of the old town architecture. Faded buildings textured just enough to hint at memory. The sky is soaked in pinks, purples, and muted blues — as if the day is gently dying. Everything merges into a vision of a silent evening, emotionally charged yet serene.
Artistic Impression: The painting radiates a quiet strength of the girl’s inner world. Her hair becomes a flame burning through the chill of the day, while the colors and textures tell a story of solitude, inspiration, and deep connection with nature. Each layer of paint pulses with emotion.
Prompt: Prompt by jexiq q: <<Masterpiece>>: Scene: Impasto, Glazing and Mixing Palette Knife Techniques: "Evening on the Rooftop of the World"
In the foreground, a young woman with long ginger hair sits on the edge of an old rooftop, turned slightly to the side, her curls lifted by the wind into golden-orange swirls. Her eyes gaze into the distance, her face calm yet subtly defiant — tender and strong all at once. The city's night light seems to glow from within her, as if her soul is radiating through her skin. Here, we use the palette knife to capture the raw energy of the wind, the emotion in her posture, the dynamic tension of stillness.
The middle ground is the aged rooftop itself — weathered tiles, their color faded, bearing the weight of untold stories. The Impasto technique brings their texture to life, each deep red, earthy brown, and muted ochre layered thickly, like the strata of memory. Beside her lies an open notebook and a pencil — symbols of her inner world, her unspoken words etched silently into the night.
In the background, the city at dusk unfolds. The sky melts from amber into deep violet, glazed over with soft, transparent layers. The windows of distant buildings flicker like blinking thoughts, while a lone airplane slices through the twilight, leaving a trail like an unfinished sentence. This part is subtle, ethereal — like dreams not yet dreamed.
Mood of the painting: The scene conveys a quiet strength — a solitude that is not empty, but sacred. The ginger-haired girl isn’t a symbol of sadness, but of presence — wholeness. She doesn’t seek to be seen. She simply is, and that alone brings color to the world.
Dream Level: is increased each time when you "Go Deeper" into the dream. Each new level is harder to achieve and
takes more iterations than the one before.
Rare Deep Dream: is any dream which went deeper than level 6.
Deep Dream
You cannot go deeper into someone else's dream. You must create your own.
Deep Dream
Currently going deeper is available only for Deep Dreams.