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Song Crackle: Time Frozen in Glaze

GI2_13663 x Content Creation
Song ceramicscrackle glazewabi-sabi

Please transform this aesthetic into a transferable way of visual generation: images do not rely on clear objects to grab attention, but let subjects, informat…

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Song Crackle: Time Frozen in Glaze

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Please transform this aesthetic into a transferable way of visual generation: images do not rely on clear objects to grab attention, but let subjects, information, or products slowly emerge from a warm, time-soaked material. The overall design maintains low saturation, low noise, and soft-focus depth layers. Backgrounds can include wood grain, paper fibers, leather, clay, smoke, fabric, rock surfaces, food textures, data bases, or abstract spaces, but all should present tangible thickness, slight rotation, and edge shadows, allowing the center to be gently lifted by a restrained diffused light. Don't make template-based posters, and don't let the decorations be louder than the content; All elements should seem to have naturally accumulated—quiet, mature, reserved, and memorable.

Text is the main structural force of the image. Chinese titles should have a slender, slender, breathable Song font or scholarly temperament, with slightly loose spacing and open line spacing, allowing words to be broken down, misaligned, and layered, making the text blocks like a group of floating specimens or fallen leaves—not perfectly aligned, but maintaining internal order. English, numbers, annotations, and small labels use lighter serif or narrow font as rhythm pauses and side notes, with small area but precise placement. The main headline and subheading create contrasts of size, language, and light-shadow: the larger Chinese carries emotion and poetry, while the smaller English or numbers carry explanation, time, category, ranking, indicators, sources, or subtle rational echoes. You can add a minimalist symbolic shape, line, leaf, dot, emblem, or data marker as a visual twist. Don't make cute icons or take away the weight of the text.

The color system is organized by "dark air + warm subject + low-brightness text + small semantic highlights." The light and shadow relationships and soft boundaries among amber brown, caramel brown, smoky black, and off-white are retained in reference images, but the color parts should change their roles according to the actual content: themes such as knowledge, reports, finance, and technology can make the highlight colors cooler, cleaner, and more like low-light annotations; Food, lifestyle, solar terms, and cultural themes can make it warmer, oilier, or papery; Medical, environmental protection, and public welfare themes can make it cleaner, lighter, and more breathable; A commercial launch or cover theme can make it sharper and more focused, occupying only a minimal area. The large color areas in the background should always be restrained; accent colors should not spread into full-screen decoration, but should take emotional turns near title boundaries, key numbers, legends, tags, buttons, or visual focal points. Text colors should mainly be ivory white, old paper white, pale gray-gold, or matte light colors; the dark areas should retain details and avoid hard cuts of pure black and white.

The layout adopts an order of cohesion at the center and soft replenishment around the edges. The center of the frame can place titles, core data, product outlines, character poses, chart conclusions, or main visual objects, leaving a slow space surrounded by shadows; A small number of brands, series names, chapter titles, or short sentences are retained at the top, with parenthetical annotations on both sides, and extremely fine dividers, short English phrases, footnotes, sources, indicator explanations, or a dense line of small text pressing down the screen, making the work resemble both a cover and a premium report page. The reading path starts from the central large text, pauses briefly by graphics or highlight colors, and then settles at the bottom information layer; Density decreases from the center toward the edge, and edge information should be small, stable, and accurate. When used for charts and rankings, it makes data seem to be stored in this calm material, turning key numbers into poetic titles; When used in PPTs or reports, create a soft yet clear hierarchy of chapter titles, key conclusions, and supporting explanations; When using products, people, food, architecture, or natural objects, focus on contours, materials, shadows, and blank spaces, rather than copying the original subject. Now, applying this aesthetic to my actual content, letting the image naturally grow into the form it needs.

This topic: Plan a topic that matches the style of this prompt, then create a PPT around it, preferably in a specific direction of traditional Chinese culture.

At least 10 images are required