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ornament-style-mono

pjt222
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Esta Habilidad Claude ayuda a los desarrolladores a generar patrones ornamentales monocromáticos basados en estilos históricos clásicos mediante IA. Proporciona una guía estructurada para crear arte lineal y representaciones en silueta de bordes decorativos, medallones y frisos. Úsala cuando necesites producir imágenes de referencia o explorar la ornamentación histórica a través de IA generativa.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

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Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Comando PluginAlternativo
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternativo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/ornament-style-mono

Copia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad

Documentación

Ornament Style — Monochrome

Design monochrome ornamental patterns by combining art historical knowledge of classical ornament with AI-assisted image generation. Every design rooted in specific historical period and motif tradition from Alexander Speltz's The Styles of Ornament (1904).

When Use

  • Creating decorative borders, medallions, friezes, or panels in single color
  • Exploring historical ornament styles through generative AI
  • Producing line art, silhouette, woodcut, or pen-and-ink renderings of classical motifs
  • Generating reference imagery for design, illustration, or educational materials
  • Studying structural grammar of ornamental traditions across cultures and periods

Inputs

  • Required: Desired historical period or style (or "surprise me" for random selection)
  • Required: Application context (border, medallion, frieze, panel, tile, standalone motif)
  • Optional: Specific motif preference (acanthus, palmette, meander, arabesque, etc.)
  • Optional: Rendering style preference (line art, silhouette, woodcut, pen-and-ink, engraving)
  • Optional: Target resolution and aspect ratio
  • Optional: Seed value for reproducible generation

Steps

Step 1: Select Historical Period

Choose period from classical ornament taxonomy. Each period has characteristic motifs and structural principles.

Historical Ornament Periods:
┌───────────────────┬─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────┐
│ Period            │ Date Range      │ Key Motifs                               │ Mono Suitability     │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Egyptian          │ 3100–332 BCE    │ Lotus, papyrus, scarab, winged disk,     │ Excellent — bold     │
│                   │                 │ uraeus, ankh                             │ geometric forms      │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Greek             │ 800–31 BCE      │ Meander/Greek key, palmette, anthemion,  │ Excellent — high     │
│                   │                 │ acanthus, guilloche, egg-and-dart        │ contrast geometry    │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Roman             │ 509 BCE–476 CE  │ Acanthus scroll, rosette, grotesque,     │ Very good — dense    │
│                   │                 │ candelabra, rinceau, trophy              │ carved relief style  │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Byzantine         │ 330–1453 CE     │ Interlace, vine scroll, cross forms,     │ Good — flat          │
│                   │                 │ basket weave, peacock, chi-rho           │ silhouette style     │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Islamic           │ 7th–17th c.     │ Arabesque, geometric star, muqarnas,     │ Excellent — pure     │
│                   │                 │ tessellation, knotwork, calligraphic     │ geometric abstraction│
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Romanesque        │ 1000–1200 CE    │ Interlace, beast chains, chevron,        │ Very good — heavy    │
│                   │                 │ billet, zigzag, inhabited scroll         │ carved stone quality │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Gothic            │ 1150–1500 CE    │ Trefoil, quatrefoil, crocket,           │ Very good — tracery  │
│                   │                 │ finial, tracery, naturalistic leaf       │ and window patterns  │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Renaissance       │ 1400–1600 CE    │ Grotesque, candelabra, putto,           │ Good — engraving     │
│                   │                 │ medallion, festoon, cartouche           │ and woodcut styles   │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Baroque/Rococo    │ 1600–1780 CE    │ C-scroll, S-scroll, shell, asymmetric   │ Moderate — complex   │
│                   │                 │ cartouche, garland, ribbon              │ forms benefit from   │
│                   │                 │                                          │ color for depth      │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
│ Art Nouveau       │ 1890–1910 CE    │ Whiplash curve, organic line, lily,     │ Excellent — defined  │
│                   │                 │ dragonfly, femme-fleur, sinuous vine    │ by line quality      │
└───────────────────┴─────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────┘
  1. User specified period? Confirm and note its characteristic motifs
  2. "Surprise me"? Select randomly — weight toward periods with "Excellent" mono suitability
  3. Note 2-3 primary motifs associated with period for use in prompt construction

Got: Clearly identified period with 2-3 candidate motifs and understanding of why period's ornament works well (or presents challenges) in monochrome.

If fail: User requests period not in table (e.g., Celtic, Aztec, Art Deco)? Research its ornamental vocabulary using WebSearch or WebFetch and construct equivalent entry with motif list and mono suitability assessment before proceeding.

Step 2: Analyze Motif Structure

Understand structural grammar of chosen motif before constructing prompt.

  1. Identify symmetry type:

    • Bilateral (mirror across one axis — most organic motifs)
    • Radial (rotational — rosettes, medallions, star patterns)
    • Translational (repeating unit — friezes, borders, tessellations)
    • Point (central focus radiating outward — compass roses, mandalas)
  2. Identify geometric scaffold:

    • Circle-based (rosettes, medallions, roundels)
    • Rectangle-based (panels, metopes, cartouches)
    • Triangle-based (pediment fills, spandrels)
    • Band-based (friezes, borders, running ornament)
  3. Identify fill pattern:

    • Solid (silhouette, no internal detail)
    • Line-filled (hatching, cross-hatching, parallel lines)
    • Open (outline only, negative space dominant)
    • Mixed (outline with selective internal detail)
  4. Identify edge treatment:

    • Clean boundary (contained within frame)
    • Organic bleed (motif extends beyond or dissolves at edges)
    • Interlocking (connects to adjacent units — for repeating patterns)

Got: Structural description like "bilateral symmetry, band-based scaffold, line-filled, interlocking edges" that informs prompt.

If fail: Motif structure unclear? Look up visual references using WebSearch for "[period] [motif] ornament" and analyze first few results. Speltz's original plates are public domain and widely available online.

Step 3: Construct Monochrome Prompt

Build text prompt for Z-Image generation using period, motif, and structural analysis.

Prompt Template:

[Rendering style] of [motif name] ornament in the [period] style,
[composition type], monochrome, black and white,
[structural details from Step 2],
[application context], [additional qualifiers]

Rendering Style Options:

  • detailed line art — clean vector-like lines, no fills
  • black silhouette — solid black forms on white ground
  • woodcut print — bold carved lines with wood grain texture
  • pen-and-ink illustration — fine lines with hatching for depth
  • copperplate engraving — precise parallel lines creating tonal gradation
  • stencil design — connected negative space, no floating islands

Composition Qualifiers:

  • symmetrical, centered, repeating pattern, border design
  • isolated motif on white background, continuous frieze
  • within a circular frame, filling a rectangular panel

Monochrome Constraint (always include):

  • monochrome, black and white, no color, no shading (for pure line art)
  • monochrome, black and white, high contrast (for silhouette)
  • monochrome, black and white, fine hatching for depth (for engraving style)

Example Prompts:

  • detailed line art of Greek meander border pattern, continuous frieze, monochrome, black and white, geometric precision, repeating unit, classical antiquity style
  • black silhouette of Egyptian lotus and papyrus ornament, symmetrical panel design, monochrome, black and white, high contrast, temple decoration style
  • pen-and-ink illustration of Art Nouveau whiplash curve with lily motif, vertical panel, monochrome, black and white, sinuous organic lines, Alphonse Mucha influence

Got: Prompt of 20-40 words specifying rendering style, motif, period, composition, monochrome constraint.

If fail: Prompt too vague? Add structural specifics from Step 2. Too complex (over 50 words)? Simplify by removing adjectives, keeping only structural essentials. Z-Image responds best to clear, specific prompts — avoid abstract or conceptual language.

Step 4: Configure Generation Parameters

Select resolution and generation parameters appropriate to application context.

Resolution by Application:
┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
│ Application        │ Recommended         │ Rationale                      │
├────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
│ Medallion / Roundel│ 1024x1024 (1:1)     │ Radial symmetry needs square   │
│ Tile / Repeat Unit │ 1024x1024 (1:1)     │ Square for seamless tiling     │
│ Horizontal Frieze  │ 1280x720 (16:9)     │ Wide format for running border │
│ Vertical Panel     │ 720x1280 (9:16)     │ Portrait format for columns    │
│ Wide Border        │ 1344x576 (21:9)     │ Ultrawide for architectural    │
│ General / Flexible │ 1152x896 (9:7)      │ Balanced landscape format      │
│ Large Detail       │ 1536x1536 (1:1)     │ Higher res for fine line work  │
└────────────────────┴─────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
  1. Select resolution based on application context
  2. Set steps to 8 (default) for initial generation; increase to 10-12 for fine line detail
  3. Set shift to 3 (default) unless experimenting
  4. Choose random_seed: true for exploration or random_seed: false with specific seed for reproducibility
  5. Record all parameters for documentation

Got: Complete parameter set ready for generation: resolution, steps, shift, seed strategy.

If fail: Unsure about resolution? Default to 1024x1024 (1:1) — works for most ornamental contexts and fastest to generate.

Step 5: Generate Image

Invoke Z-Image MCP tool to produce ornament.

  1. Call mcp__hf-mcp-server__gr1_z_image_turbo_generate with:
    • prompt: constructed prompt from Step 3
    • resolution: from Step 4
    • steps: from Step 4
    • shift: from Step 4
    • random_seed: from Step 4
    • seed: specific seed if random_seed is false
  2. Record returned seed value for reproducibility
  3. Note generation time

Got: Generated image and seed value. Image should show recognizable ornamental forms in monochrome.

If fail: MCP tool unavailable? Verify hf-mcp-server configured (see configure-mcp-server or troubleshoot-mcp-connection). Tool available but returns error? Simplify prompt and retry. Generated image entirely abstract with no ornamental character? Prompt needs more specific structural language — return to Step 3.

Step 6: Evaluate Against Style Criteria

Assess generated image against four criteria.

Monochrome Ornament Evaluation Rubric:
┌─────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Criterion           │ Evaluation Questions                                  │
├─────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ 1. Symmetry         │ Does the design exhibit the intended symmetry type?   │
│                     │ Is it visually balanced? Are repeating elements       │
│                     │ consistent?                                           │
├─────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ 2. Monochrome       │ Is the image truly black and white? Are there         │
│    Fidelity         │ unwanted grays, colors, or gradients? Does the        │
│                     │ rendering style match the request?                    │
├─────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ 3. Period Accuracy  │ Would this design be recognizable as belonging to     │
│                     │ the specified period? Are the motifs period-           │
│                     │ appropriate? Does it avoid anachronistic elements?    │
├─────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ 4. Detail Level     │ Is the level of detail appropriate for the rendering  │
│                     │ style? Line art should have clean lines; woodcut      │
│                     │ should show bold strokes; engraving should show       │
│                     │ systematic hatching.                                  │
└─────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
  1. Score each criterion: Strong (clearly meets), Adequate (partially meets), Weak (does not meet)
  2. Note specific observations for each criterion
  3. 3+ criteria score Strong? Design successful
  4. 2+ criteria score Weak? Return to Step 3 for prompt refinement

Got: Scored evaluation with specific observations. Most first-generation images score Adequate on 2-3 criteria.

If fail: All criteria score Weak? Prompt may be too abstract or too complex. Simplify to most essential elements: one motif, one rendering style, explicit "monochrome black and white" constraint. Consider switching to period with higher mono suitability.

Step 7: Iterate or Finalize

Refine design through targeted iteration or accept result.

Iteration Strategies:

  1. Seed-locked refinement: Keep same seed, adjust prompt slightly — evolves composition while maintaining basic structure
  2. Random exploration: Use random_seed: true with same prompt — produces variations on same concept
  3. Prompt evolution: Modify specific elements (change rendering style, add/remove motif details, adjust composition)

Iteration Budget: Limit to 3 iterations per design concept. Result not satisfactory after 3 iterations? Reconsider period/motif combination or rendering style fundamentally.

  1. Evaluation in Step 6 indicates specific weaknesses? Adjust prompt to address them:
    • Weak symmetry → add "perfectly symmetrical" or "mirror symmetry"
    • Color leaking → add "pure black and white, no gray tones, no color"
    • Wrong period feel → add specific period reference artists or monuments
    • Insufficient detail → increase steps to 10-12, add "highly detailed"
  2. Regenerate using Step 5
  3. Re-evaluate using Step 6
  4. Accept when 3+ criteria score Strong or iteration budget exhausted

Got: Improved image after 1-2 iterations, or decision to accept current best result.

If fail: Iteration not improving results? Fundamental prompt concept may not translate well to model. Try different motif from same period, or switch rendering style entirely (e.g., from line art to silhouette).

Step 8: Document the Design

Create complete record of final design for reproducibility and reference.

  1. Record:
    • Period: Historical period name and date range
    • Motif: Primary motif(s) used
    • Rendering Style: Line art, silhouette, woodcut, etc.
    • Final Prompt: Exact prompt that produced accepted image
    • Seed: Seed value for reproduction
    • Resolution: Resolution used
    • Steps/Shift: Generation parameters
    • Evaluation: Brief notes on four criteria scores
    • Iterations: Number of iterations and key changes made
  2. Note any art historical observations — how generated design compares to historical examples
  3. Suggest potential applications: print, digital border, textile pattern, etc.

Got: Reproducible record allowing exact image to be regenerated and design lineage understood.

If fail: Documentation feels excessive? Minimum: record final prompt and seed — these two values sufficient to reproduce image.

Key Motifs Reference

The following motifs appear across multiple historical periods and form core vocabulary of classical ornament:

  • Acanthus: Deeply lobed leaf; Greek origin, dominant in Roman and Renaissance ornament
  • Palmette: Fan-shaped leaf cluster; Egyptian and Greek, ancestor of anthemion
  • Anthemion: Alternating palmette-and-lotus frieze; Greek, endlessly adapted
  • Guilloche: Interlocking circles forming chain; ancient, universal
  • Meander / Greek Key: Angular spiral forming continuous band; quintessentially Greek
  • Arabesque: Infinitely extending vegetal scroll; Islamic, non-representational by principle
  • Trefoil / Quatrefoil: Three/four-lobed forms within circle; Gothic tracery
  • Rosette: Radially symmetric flower form; universal across all periods
  • Scroll (C and S): Spiraling forms; Baroque and Rococo signature elements
  • Grotesque: Fantastical human-animal-vegetal hybrid; Roman, revived in Renaissance
  • Interlace / Knotwork: Woven bands without beginning or end; Celtic, Islamic, Byzantine
  • Lotus: Stylized water lily; Egyptian origin, spread across Asian ornament traditions

Checks

  • Specific historical period selected with rationale
  • Motif structure analyzed (symmetry, scaffold, fill, edge treatment)
  • Prompt includes explicit monochrome constraint ("black and white" or equivalent)
  • Prompt specifies rendering style (line art, silhouette, woodcut, etc.)
  • Resolution matches application context
  • Generated image evaluated against 4-point rubric
  • Seed value recorded for reproducibility
  • Final design documented with prompt, seed, parameters

Pitfalls

  • Omitting monochrome constraint: Z-Image defaults to color. Without explicit "monochrome, black and white" in prompt, you get color output. Add constraint early in prompt, not as afterthought
  • Over-specifying prompt: Prompts over 50 words tend to produce confused results. Keep to one motif, one rendering style, one composition type. Quality comes from clarity, not quantity
  • Ignoring period grammar: Each period has structural rules. Gothic trefoils inside Egyptian frames, or Baroque scrolls in Greek meander borders, produce visual incoherence. Stay within period vocabulary
  • Expecting vector output: Z-Image produces raster images. For true vector line art, generated image serves as reference for manual tracing, not final production asset
  • Skipping structural analysis: Jumping from period selection to prompt without analyzing motif structure produces generic "decorative" results rather than historically grounded ornament

See Also

  • ornament-style-color — polychromatic companion to this skill; adds color palette definition and color-to-structure mapping
  • meditate — focused attention and visual imagination practices can inform ornamental composition
  • review-web-design — design review principles (visual hierarchy, rhythm, balance) apply directly to ornamental composition

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman/skills/ornament-style-mono
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agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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