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168 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
168 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Embiggen
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---
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# :material-loupe: Embiggen
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**upscale your images on limited memory machines**
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GFPGAN and Real-ESRGAN are both memory intensive. In order to avoid
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crashes and memory overloads during the Stable Diffusion process,
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these effects are applied after Stable Diffusion has completed its
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work.
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In single image generations, you will see the output right away but
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when you are using multiple iterations, the images will first be
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generated and then upscaled and face restored after that process is
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complete. While the image generation is taking place, you will still
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be able to preview the base images.
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If you wish to stop during the image generation but want to upscale or
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face restore a particular generated image, pass it again with the same
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prompt and generated seed along with the `-U` and `-G` prompt
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arguments to perform those actions.
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## Embiggen
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If you wanted to be able to do more (pixels) without running out of VRAM,
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or you want to upscale with details that couldn't possibly appear
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without the context of a prompt, this is the feature to try out.
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Embiggen automates the process of taking an init image, upscaling it,
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cutting it into smaller tiles that slightly overlap, running all the
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tiles through img2img to refine details with respect to the prompt,
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and "stitching" the tiles back together into a cohesive image.
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It automatically computes how many tiles are needed, and so it can be fed
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*ANY* size init image and perform Img2Img on it (though it will be run only
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one tile at a time, which can cause problems, see the Note at the end).
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If you're familiar with "GoBig" (ala [progrock-stable](https://github.com/lowfuel/progrock-stable))
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it's similar to that, except it can work up to an arbitrarily large size
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(instead of just 2x), with tile overlaps configurable as a ratio, and
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has extra logic to re-run any number of the tile sub-sections of the image
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if for example a small part of a huge run got messed up.
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### Usage
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`-embiggen <scaling_factor> <esrgan_strength> <overlap_ratio OR overlap_pixels>`
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Takes a scaling factor relative to the size of the `--init_img` (`-I`), followed by
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ESRGAN upscaling strength (0 - 1.0), followed by minimum amount of overlap
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between tiles as a decimal ratio (0 - 1.0) *OR* a number of pixels.
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The scaling factor is how much larger than the `--init_img` the output
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should be, and will multiply both x and y axis, so an image that is a
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scaling factor of 3.0 has 3*3= 9 times as many pixels, and will take
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(at least) 9 times as long (see overlap for why it might be
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longer). If the `--init_img` is already the right size `-embiggen 1`,
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and it can also be less than one if the init_img is too big.
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Esrgan_strength defaults to 0.75, and the overlap_ratio defaults to
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0.25, both are optional.
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Unlike Img2Img, the `--width` (`-W`) and `--height` (`-H`) arguments
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do not control the size of the image as a whole, but the size of the
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tiles used to Embiggen the image.
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ESRGAN is used to upscale the `--init_img` prior to cutting it into
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tiles/pieces to run through img2img and then stitch back
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together. Embiggen can be run without ESRGAN; just set the strength to
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zero (e.g. `-embiggen 1.75 0`). The output of Embiggen can also be
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upscaled after it's finished (`-U`).
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The overlap is the minimum that tiles will overlap with adjacent
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tiles, specified as either a ratio or a number of pixels. How much the
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tiles overlap determines the likelihood the tiling will be noticable,
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really small overlaps (e.g. a couple of pixels) may produce noticeable
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grid-like fuzzy distortions in the final stitched image. Though, as
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the overlapping space doesn't contribute to making the image bigger,
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and the larger the overlap the more tiles (and the more time) it will
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take to finish.
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Because the overlapping parts of tiles don't "contribute" to
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increasing size, every tile after the first in a row or column
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effectively only covers an extra `1 - overlap_ratio` on each axis. If
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the input/`--init_img` is same size as a tile, the ideal (for time)
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scaling factors with the default overlap (0.25) are 1.75, 2.5, 3.25,
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4.0, etc.
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`-embiggen_tiles <spaced list of tiles>`
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An advanced usage useful if you only want to alter parts of the image
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while running Embiggen. It takes a list of tiles by number to run and
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replace onto the initial image e.g. `1 3 5`. It's useful for either
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fixing problem spots from a previous Embiggen run, or selectively
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altering the prompt for sections of an image - for creative or
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coherency reasons.
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Tiles are numbered starting with one, and left-to-right,
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top-to-bottom. So, if you are generating a 3x3 tiled image, the
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middle row would be `4 5 6`.
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`-embiggen_strength <strength>`
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Another advanced option if you want to experiment with the strength parameter
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that embiggen uses when it calls Img2Img. Values range from 0.0 to 1.0
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and lower values preserve more of the character of the initial image.
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Values that are too high will result in a completely different end image,
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while values that are too low will result in an image not dissimilar to one
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you would get with ESRGAN upscaling alone. The default value is 0.4.
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### Examples
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!!! example ""
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Running Embiggen with 512x512 tiles on an existing image, scaling up by a factor of 2.5x;
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and doing the same again (default ESRGAN strength is 0.75, default overlap between tiles is 0.25):
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```bash
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invoke > a photo of a forest at sunset -s 100 -W 512 -H 512 -I outputs/forest.png -f 0.4 -embiggen 2.5
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invoke > a photo of a forest at sunset -s 100 -W 512 -H 512 -I outputs/forest.png -f 0.4 -embiggen 2.5 0.75 0.25
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```
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If your starting image was also 512x512 this should have taken 9 tiles.
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!!! example ""
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If there weren't enough clouds in the sky of that forest you just made
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(and that image is about 1280 pixels (512*2.5) wide A.K.A. three
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512x512 tiles with 0.25 overlaps wide) we can replace that top row of
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tiles:
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```bash
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invoke> a photo of puffy clouds over a forest at sunset -s 100 -W 512 -H 512 -I outputs/000002.seed.png -f 0.5 -embiggen_tiles 1 2 3
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```
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## Fixing Previously-Generated Images
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It is easy to apply embiggen to any previously-generated file without having to
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look up the original prompt and provide an initial image. Just use the
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syntax `!fix path/to/file.png <embiggen>`. For example, you can rewrite the
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previous command to look like this:
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```bash
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invoke> !fix ./outputs/000002.seed.png -embiggen_tiles 1 2 3
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```
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A new file named `000002.seed.fixed.png` will be created in the output directory. Note that
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the `!fix` command does not replace the original file, unlike the behavior at generate time.
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You do not need to provide the prompt, and `!fix` automatically selects a good strength for
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embiggen-ing.
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!!! note
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Because the same prompt is used on all the tiled images, and the model
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doesn't have the context of anything outside the tile being run - it
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can end up creating repeated pattern (also called 'motifs') across all
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the tiles based on that prompt. The best way to combat this is
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lowering the `--strength` (`-f`) to stay more true to the init image,
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and increasing the number of steps so there is more compute-time to
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create the detail. Anecdotally `--strength` 0.35-0.45 works pretty
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well on most things. It may also work great in some examples even with
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the `--strength` set high for patterns, landscapes, or subjects that
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are more abstract. Because this is (relatively) fast, you can also
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preserve the best parts from each.
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Author: [Travco](https://github.com/travco)
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