The color gradients and shading would be effectively impossible, unfortunately. You could recreate the flat pattern possibly, but it just wouldn’t look the same. The detailing on the mouth especially wouldn’t work :(
You could reproduce something like it, but I’m going to stand by the assertion that the subtle color gradients that cause the “shading” effect and give the AI piece depth are realistically impossible.
Those are all amazing but they’re working with the limitations of the medium masterfully, not recreating something pre-dictated. Stupid metaphor: It’s like how the graphics in windwaker still hold up while most of the other games on that platform look horrible by modern standards; they produced art that looked good on it’s own instead of art that relied on you to fill in implied details.
You for sure can! Were I doing this I’d use a 3D stitch for the teeth/gums/lips and the outlines of the eye and lower jaw (probably also combined with stitching over layers of felt (or similar) to really bulk up the depth for the whole piece, especially for the horns), but it’s going to be miserable to do and I really don’t expect such coarse stitching to look right when done that way.
The big issue I see is that the shading is just too gentle - most complex embroidery like this looks “cel shaded” because you can’t get smooth gradients with thread, and swapping different colors of thread to produce that look ruins the stitch pattern.
There are a handful of techniques wherein you create the stitch using a single thread on a blank piece, paint the color gradients on with dye, unravel the whole embroidery then recreate it exactly on the final piece. (I own an edo period tapestry where this was done, though it’s faded to where it’s extremely difficult to tell.) Needless to say it’s incredibly rare for anyone to take the time to do it this way anymore
The color gradients and shading would be effectively impossible, unfortunately. You could recreate the flat pattern possibly, but it just wouldn’t look the same. The detailing on the mouth especially wouldn’t work :(
Once again AI broke my heart. I can’t believe some people actually look out for AI girlfriend…
I’ve seen stuff on r/embroidery that’s difficult to believe. E.g.:
‘Well, I have finished my new embroidery, now you can admire it’
‘I can finally reveal my latest embroidery project’
‘I tell my gran I’m into embroidery and she casually drops she used to be a master’
‘Kiwi based on old online illustration’
‘Embroidery or cake’
‘Kimberly the tortoise’
You could reproduce something like it, but I’m going to stand by the assertion that the subtle color gradients that cause the “shading” effect and give the AI piece depth are realistically impossible.
Those are all amazing but they’re working with the limitations of the medium masterfully, not recreating something pre-dictated. Stupid metaphor: It’s like how the graphics in windwaker still hold up while most of the other games on that platform look horrible by modern standards; they produced art that looked good on it’s own instead of art that relied on you to fill in implied details.
Could you not also control the height of the pattern by having more stitches under the raised parts?
You for sure can! Were I doing this I’d use a 3D stitch for the teeth/gums/lips and the outlines of the eye and lower jaw (probably also combined with stitching over layers of felt (or similar) to really bulk up the depth for the whole piece, especially for the horns), but it’s going to be miserable to do and I really don’t expect such coarse stitching to look right when done that way.
The big issue I see is that the shading is just too gentle - most complex embroidery like this looks “cel shaded” because you can’t get smooth gradients with thread, and swapping different colors of thread to produce that look ruins the stitch pattern.
There are a handful of techniques wherein you create the stitch using a single thread on a blank piece, paint the color gradients on with dye, unravel the whole embroidery then recreate it exactly on the final piece. (I own an edo period tapestry where this was done, though it’s faded to where it’s extremely difficult to tell.) Needless to say it’s incredibly rare for anyone to take the time to do it this way anymore