Artificial intelligence is about to take over the fashion world.

For good reason, the text-to-image generators like OpenAI's Dall-E and Midjourney have gone crazy. Even though they can produce some seriously nutty imagery, at the end of the day it's the quality of that output that makes it so captivating.

These programs are in the early stages of making their way into the creative industry. What the beginnings of text-to-image-generated fashion might look like was the topic of discussion on the social networking site.

A user named Paul Trillo wrote in a social media post that he was using an Artificial Intelligence fashion show to create hundreds of outfits. It's an interesting way to come up with fashion and costume ideas.

Make it Snappy

Trillo suggests that the fashion industry could use text-to-image generators to come up with new ideas.

Some fast fashion sites make thousands of new designs every day. Their bottom line would benefit from that process being made even faster by artificial intelligence. At least one digital fashion show has already taken place, and a number of brands have begun to use the metaverse as a place to sell their goods. It could find its place in any of these operations if it wanted to be.

Brainstorm City

Trillo is not the first creator to use text-to-image services. Artists from a number of creative fields claim to have used the tech as a way to speed their creative process along, whether their creations remain digital depictions or are recreated off screen.

There is controversy surrounding the inclusion of these programs into the creative industries. Many have pondered more philosophical questions of artificial intelligence-assisted creativity, while others worry about job security, a discussion that's gained steam following Openai's declaration that 2-generated imagery can be bought and sold.

"A decade ago, the conventional wisdom was that artificial intelligence would first impact physical labor, and then cognitive labor, and then maybe someday it could do creative work," said Openai's CEO, Sam Altman. It now appears that it will go in the opposite direction.

Major luxury brand is slinging hideous and un affordable NFT Pendants.