Mood and Texture
This page has been rebuilt with real photographic references.
Mood and texture terms do not explain the whole scene, but they strongly shape how the finished frame feels emotionally and materially.
cinematic
Cinematic usually means the frame feels intentionally staged like a film still, not just casually photographed.

- Prompt fragment:
cinematic, controlled portrait lighting, film still atmosphere - Real reference: Jessica Mauboy (7739424318).jpg
moody
Moody describes frames where emotional atmosphere is stronger than brightness or clarity. The scene feels weighted or emotionally charged.

- Prompt fragment:
moody, low-key atmosphere, emotionally dense portrait - Real reference: Jo Louise (19783568163).jpg
gritty
Gritty suggests roughness that has not been polished away. Surface imperfection, dirt, wear, or blunt realism tend to dominate.

- Prompt fragment:
gritty, rough texture, unpolished realism - Real reference: Abuja Street Portrait (103397917).jpeg
dreamlike
Dreamlike frames feel softer, stranger, and less bound to ordinary reality, even when the photo still looks grounded.

- Prompt fragment:
dreamlike, soft unreal atmosphere, gentle visual distortion - Real reference: Infrared HDR St Andrew’s church Thursford Norfolk (2954315611).jpg
hyper-realistic
Hyper-realistic pushes detail, texture, and sharpness so far that the frame feels almost more tactile than ordinary photography.

- Prompt fragment:
hyper-realistic, extremely crisp detail, tactile facial texture - Real reference: Untitled Portait Canon Canonet G3 Ql17 Test (72971075).jpeg
surreal
Surreal means the image still reads photographically, but the combination of objects, space, or logic feels impossible.

- Prompt fragment:
surreal, photographic but impossible, uncanny composition - Real reference: Surrealism in photography 06.jpg
dramatic tension
Dramatic tension means the frame feels like something is about to happen. Pressure is present even before motion begins.

- Prompt fragment:
dramatic tension, uneasy stillness, pressure-filled framing - Real reference: Careless (31558905).jpeg
atmospheric haze
Atmospheric haze makes air itself readable. Distance becomes softer and the space between layers feels occupied by moisture or mist.

- Prompt fragment:
atmospheric haze, soft distant separation, suspended moisture in air - Real reference: Paris in the morning - Flickr - Gael Varoquaux.jpg
film grain
Film grain adds an analog texture layer that feels less clinically clean than digital sharpness.

- Prompt fragment:
film grain, analog texture, subtle organic noise - Real reference: 35mm analogue portrait Oona Mosna Windsor-Detroit 2019.jpg
high contrast
High contrast creates a stronger tonal fight between bright and dark values. The frame feels more graphic and aggressive.

- Prompt fragment:
high contrast, sharp tonal separation, striking light-dark balance - Real reference: Thomas Pynchon, high school senior portrait, 1953.jpg
Summary
Mood and texture terms usually work best after framing and lighting, but before final output style.
- film-like control:
cinematic - emotional density:
moody,dramatic tension - surface roughness:
gritty,film grain - reality distortion:
dreamlike,surreal - detail pressure:
hyper-realistic,high contrast - air and depth softness:
atmospheric haze