Punjabi
Wonderful! Here's the full Punjabi-style visual prompt for a divine, voluptuous noblewoman inspired by Punjabi attire, ornaments, and cultural grace — while keeping the same close-up goddess-like beauty and expression.
🎨 Prompt Description: Punjabi Goddess-Inspired Noble Lady (Close-Up Portrait)
A hyper-realistic close-up portrait of a goddess-like Punjabi noblewoman radiating voluptuous grace and royal dignity. She has flawless glowing wheatish-golden skin, large almond-shaped expressive eyes lined with kohl, naturally thick brows, and matte full lips shaped in a subtle, confident smile. Her hair is styled in long voluminous waves or a traditional braid with gajra or rose garlands. A part of her braid or parandi rests on her shoulder, decorated with golden tassels or beads.
She wears a rich traditional Punjabi silk lehenga or Patiala-style outfit in vibrant jewel tones — hot pink, mustard yellow, emerald green, or royal blue — with heavy golden thread embroidery and mirror work. The dupatta is draped gracefully over one shoulder, bordered with phulkari or zari designs. Her blouse (choli) is elegant, sleeveless or elbow-length, embroidered with golden motifs, covering modestly yet highlighting her noble form.
Her jewelry is magnificent: large gold “jhumar” (side tikka, optional), “nath” (optional), bold temple-style double jhumki earrings, and richly layered necklaces — a guluband choker, long haar with dangling sapphire or emerald pendant. Her ears feature multiple cartilage piercings (helix, daith, tragus, conch, anti-tragus) with small gold studs. She wears a kamarbandh (waist chain) with chain-link ornaments over the lehenga. No bindi or forehead adornments — her divine presence stands unadorned.
The background shows a grand Punjabi haveli with carved wooden arches, brass vessels, mustard fields in the distance, and a pair of tall coconut or date trees. The soft golden sunlight bathes her in a celestial glow, evoking the aura of a warrior queen, a landowner matriarch, or a divine Devi of the north.
Would you like me to also prepare a Marathi, Rajputana, or tribal goddess version next?
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