When keep face same
Keep the original woman exactly as she is — same face, expression, skin tone, hairstyle, pose, clothing, and background. Do not change her features or outfit. Only enhance her look by adding luxurious traditional South Asian jewelry. She wears elaborate layered gold necklaces with gemstone pendants, a guluband (choker), and a long haar (necklace). A sleek gold waist chain (kamarbandh) rests over her waist. Add a small, elegant nose pin (single stud only, no nose ring). Her ears have multiple cartilage piercings — including helix, daith, conch, rook, tragus, and anti-tragus — all adorned with small gold hoops or studs. Her main earrings are large temple-style jhumka or double-stud earrings. The woman has large expressive eyes, matte lips, and no bindi or tikka on her forehead. Jewelry should look regal, traditional, and photo-realistic."
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 south.
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