Transfiere Poses a tu Influencer IA 💕
A veces es muy complicado conseguir la pose que buscas y por eso, esta vez, me propuse averiguar cómo copiar una pose de una imagen de internet 🙊
Tras muchos intentos diseñé un Prompt Base que funciona 🧪
Cómo usarlo:
1️⃣ Imagen 1 = tu foto o la de tu influencer IA.
2️⃣ Imagen 2 = la pose que quieres recrear.
3️⃣ Genera en Nano-Banana y haz 4–8 intentos para elegir el mejor resultado.
Si quieres el Prompt Base comenta "ARIA" y te lo paso 💌
Mañana os subo un mini-vídeo con todo el paso a paso ✨
This card is not about fashion. It is about camera trick plus pose translation. The reason it works is that the final image exaggerates perspective enough to feel impressive, while the inset references explain how that result was built.
Why soy_aria_cruz's Low Angle Rooftop Boot Pose Transfer Went Viral — and the Formula Behind It
The image succeeds because it teaches through comparison. Viewers see the bold result first, then decode the input references second. That order makes the educational content feel exciting instead of dry.
Why This Works
The oversized boot sole is the main hook. It creates immediate depth and gives the final image an unmistakable perspective effect.
The inset references matter because they prevent the card from feeling like empty flex content. They show process, and process is what gives creator education posts authority.
Signal Table
Signal
Function
Effect
Boot sole foreground
Perspective hook
Stops the scroll instantly
Inset references
Process proof
Makes the card educational
Red arrow
Visual explanation
Links source and outcome
Urban rooftop setting
Context support
Keeps the pose grounded in a believable place
Large headline
Topic clarity
Explains what the viewer is seeing
Aesthetic Read
The aesthetic is creator-tutorial energy, not polished ad language. It feels quick, useful, and platform-native. That is exactly what makes pose-transfer cards work for education-focused accounts.
Prompt Technique Breakdown
Technique
Use Here
Prompt Advice
Result-first teaching
Lead with the bold final image
Put the strongest pose front and center
Reference overlay
Show input material visibly
Add small inset boxes instead of long explanation
Directional cue
Explain the transformation visually
Use one clear arrow, not many indicators
Perspective exaggeration
Make the effect obvious
Use low-angle sole-forward framing
Use Cases
This format is effective for pose-transfer education, creator tutorials, reel covers, AI workflow explainers, and camera-angle teaching.
It is less useful for premium branding, quiet editorial moodboards, or content that needs subtlety over immediacy.
Three Transfer Recipes
Transfer Recipe 1
Keep the same teaching structure but swap rooftop for stairs, skatepark, or alleyway.
Transfer Recipe 2
Keep the pose-transfer logic but use hand pose, face angle, or silhouette rather than boot perspective.
Transfer Recipe 3
Keep the final image dominant and replace the inset references with a before/after workflow panel.
Execution Playbook
Start with the strongest final pose. Then ask what reference or source image most clearly explains that result. Add one connecting cue only. If the layout becomes overloaded, the card stops teaching and starts shouting.
Summary
The image works because it turns perspective into a lesson. The bold final frame attracts the viewer, and the inset references justify the claim.