提示词方法论
2026-07-07 20:10Ultimate Skin & Face De-Oili...
提示词写作方法论,可作为生成/优化 Prompt 的结构化起点。
提示词方法论
去油
3,840 字7 min
Ultimate Skin & Face De-Oiling Patch / 真人皮肤与面部去油终极补丁 The face and skin must read as real human skin, not glossy plastic, not wax, not silicone, not an over-smoothed beauty-filter surface, and not a 3D render shader. Skin texture should be naturally matte to semi-matte, with believable pores, tiny unevenness, soft color variation, subtle fine lines, and slight natural imperfections preserved. Do not erase skin detail in order to make the person look cleaner. The goal is natural live-action skin, not cosmetic perfection. Suppress oily shine especially on the forehead, nose bridge, nose tip, cheeks, upper lip area, chin, and nasolabial folds. These areas must not carry sharp white specular streaks, wet-looking glare, greasy patches, mirror-like highlights, or a thick reflective oil film. Highlights on the face should be soft, broad, low-intensity, and caused only by believable lighting. The skin may catch light gently, but it must never look slippery, wet, polished, wax-coated, sweaty, or plastic. Use realistic diffuse facial lighting. Prefer soft bounced light, window light, overcast light, weak indoor ambient light, or large softbox-like diffusion. Avoid ring-light reflections, beauty-camera shine, hard frontal flash, overexposed cheek highlights, glossy influencer lighting, and commercial skincare-ad shine. If the face is lit strongly, the skin should still keep human micro-texture and controlled highlight rolloff instead of turning into a shiny surface. Preserve natural facial material separation: skin, lips, eyes, hair, clothing, and background must have different surface qualities. The skin should not share the same glossy reflection as lips, eyes, leather, latex, polished metal, glass, or wet hair. Lips can have slight natural moisture, eyes can have small catchlights, but the forehead, nose, cheeks, and chin must remain controlled and non-greasy. For AI video: keep the skin texture temporally stable across frames. No flickering facial shine, no crawling oily patches, no shifting waxy highlights, no sudden plastic smoothing between frames, no face texture melting when the person turns their head, talks, blinks, smiles, or moves under light. Facial highlights should move gently and physically according to the light direction, not swim across the skin like a separate reflective layer. Maintain consistent pores, skin grain, cheek texture, and forehead texture throughout the shot. For realistic photos or live-action stills: the result should feel like an actual camera captured a real person under controlled natural light. Keep slight sensor grain, tiny skin texture, realistic tonal transitions, and normal human asymmetry. Do not apply AI glamour retouching, porcelain skin, airbrushed skin, Korean idol glass skin, skincare advertisement shine, CGI subsurface waxiness, or hyper-polished model photography unless specifically requested. Negative lock: oily face, greasy skin, wet forehead, shiny nose, glossy cheeks, plastic skin, wax skin, silicone face, porcelain skin, over-smoothed face, beauty filter, airbrushed skin, glass skin, skincare commercial glow, mirror-like highlights, harsh specular shine, sweaty shine, reflective T-zone, unnatural face glow, CGI skin shader, 3D render face, fake skin, smeared skin texture, flickering facial highlights, crawling shine, melting face texture, inconsistent skin surface, overexposed facial highlights. Final success condition: at first glance, the person must look like a real human being filmed or photographed naturally, with believable matte human skin, visible but not ugly skin texture, controlled facial highlights, and no greasy AI shine. If beauty conflicts with realism, choose realism. If smoothness conflicts with skin credibility, preserve skin credibility. If glow conflicts with human material, remove the glow. @Alex