I should note that I’ve dabbled in this sort of thing before, but I have only had access to a much more basic version of this software, once known as DALL•E Mini but now called Craiyon. The samples I’m going to show you now were made with the full version of DALL•E 2, which produces substantially better results than the crap I was playing with. That better version is invite-only access, and I’m just on the waiting list. So I can’t play with the good toys yet. For example of what the limited version can do, here’s the results I got when I asked the limited version for a “1960s photo of futuristic Corvair”:
See? It’s impressive, and you can tell what it’s going for, but it’s very wonky. Let’s try another prompt, this time one that’s the exact same as one used by someone with access to the full DALL•E 2 system. So, here is “A 2025 Citroen DS Concept, studio lighting.” from the cut-down version:
Okay, that’s evocative, sure. But look what that same prompt gives you with DALL•E 2:
That’s a much more coherent and detailed rendering of a Citroën concept that doesn’t exist. That same experimenter, named Jakub, also tried out two other imaginary 2025 concept cars, including a wonderful-looking Trabant:
…and this genuinely stunning Jaguar E-Type concept:
That looks great! I think the rear quarter is especially nice. This could actually pass as a 2025 Jaguar concept car, I’d think. Some users have gotten really creative with this; here’s an animation of “unmodernizing a Tesla”:
— Aditya Ramesh (@model_mechanic) April 18, 2022 What I love about this one is how well the AI seems to give the illusion of “understanding” (it doesn’t, but still) the visual vocabulary of different car eras, while still keeping some crucial Tesla-design markers intact. You get skinnier tires and chrome bumpers and more upright proportions but never a grille, all of which keeps the older versions of the cars looking plausibly Teslerian.
I mean, look how great some of these look! I love the ’50s/’60s one on the middle right, and the two in the bottom row feel a bit like some 1930s European rear-engined car that Porsche stole ideas from while designing the Beetle. There’s definitely a design lineage demonstrated here, and that’s incredible. Speaking of Tesla, there’s some fun, kinda snarky prompts, like “Tesla pickup truck but instead of being a massive eyesore it looks as beautiful as the rest of their cars, 3d render, unreal engine” which results in something that looks a bit like a Ford Ranger Lightning, if that was something that existed, along with some other more Tesla-like designs, even if doors and door handles really seem to confuse the AI: To be fair, it’s never used a door, so I get it. Unsurprisingly, there’s a lot of people trying Tesla stuff, but I want to show one more example, because these results are especially good. The prompt is “Steampunk Tesla Model X, digital art”:
Okay, let’s get away from Tesla and on to more open prompts, but still involving the past, and evocative. Something like this one: “a 1920s photo of a futuristic car, sitting beside an old house.” That gives this result, which feels like a film still from a documentary about a largely forgotten inventor who could have changed the world if not for some kind of scandal involving, oh, a Poseidon-based sex cult or something:
That doesn’t just feel like a futuristic car, it feels like what a futuristic car would have been imagined to be in the 1920s, which is the sort of nuance that makes all of these truly incredible. Okay, let’s look at one more. This one is also a great prompt, from a Redditor named RifeWithKaiju: “Silent film version of the Deloreon [sic] from Back to the Future”:
Again, we have this black box of an AI doing some quite complicated and subtle things; the car is clearly a 1920s era, but it’s laden with the same sort of extra equipment that the actual Back to the Future DeLorean is to make it into a time machine, and that equipment even feels more 1920s-appropriate as well. At this moment, so much of AI is a black box, and I’m not sure anyone, even the people behind DALL•E 2, really, really know what’s going on amongst all those if-then statements and branching decision trees and sparks and whatevers. But. the results are at once impressive and thought-provoking and maybe even a little shocking, and I’m delighted to see that, and I hope to see much more. Also, I hope I get off that waiting list. I want to try this thing out myself! Love your work Adrian, screw that haters! I’ve also learned that, objectively, I prefer all fictional Teslas better than all real Teslas. Other combinations I’d like to try: -ADU1B LeMans Triumph Spitfire with a Milan SL velomobile -McClaren Speedtail with a 1967 Panhard CD Peugeot 66C -Lotus Europa minitruck -Stella solar car with a 1st gen VW Beetle -National Lampoons Family Truckster with a Mercedes Vision EQXX -Modern Yugo GV streamliner -VW Karmann Ghia modernized with front styling cues of a Ford F150 Lightning Some of those look fun to run through the old noodle box. Also not only am I eating sour cream and onion Snap’d Cheez-its, but I was thinking about looking up some filthy pictures! Get out of my head man! In closing, I feel like I’d buy the hell out of that Jag if I could (but let’s face it, that’d be $250k or more), the 1920s future car picture looks like a slightly dystopian Edward Hopper, and the Tesla pickup is just bad ass. Carl Sagan driving an S2000 on an ice moon produced some trippy results. Also, that thing is gorgeous and Jag should go ahead and build it. I don’t care if the hood is implausibly long, stick a straight-8 in there or something, that thing would rule the world as a GT car based on looks alone. I seriously can’t wait for the invite. DALL-E Mini is cool but it’s definitely limited. Very curious about the crazy Renaults I’ll be generating with the new version. But this is vastly much more interesting. Around here, the gators get meth just like the rest of us.