Edit the provided image into an antique anatomical book plate. Preserve the original character’s pose, camera angle, body proportions, silhouette, gesture, and overall composition as closely as possible, but transform the subject into a refined anatomical study illustration. The final image should look like a vintage medical anatomy textbook page printed on aged ivory paper, with sepia stains, subtle paper fibers, worn edges, faint foxing marks, and archival ink texture. Convert the visible body into a clean anatomical sketch that reveals bones, superficial muscles, tendons, ligaments, and selected organ silhouettes in a didactic, non-gory, museum-quality style. Keep the anatomy elegant and educational, like a 19th-century anatomical atlas mixed with precise modern medical illustration. Use thin graphite lines, red and blue anatomical ink accents, muted watercolor washes, and delicate hatching. Avoid horror, gore, blood, injury, mutilation, or surgical violence. The figure must remain in the same pose as the source image, including limb position, torso rotation, head angle, gaze direction, hand placement, and perspective distortion. If the original image is anime, game art, illustration, or realistic photography, reinterpret it consistently as an anatomical diagram while keeping the recognizable posture and visual identity cues only as subtle external outlines. Clothing and accessories may be simplified into faint translucent contour lines so the anatomical structures remain readable. Add anatomical labels in Latin using a vintage typewriter font, as if typed onto the page. Labels should be connected to structures with thin black leader lines. Use accurate Latin anatomical terminology, including examples such as: Cranium, Mandibula, Clavicula, Sternum, Costae, Scapula, Humerus, Radius, Ulna, Vertebrae cervicales, Vertebrae thoracicae, Vertebrae lumbales, Pelvis, Os ilium, Os ischii, Femur, Patella, Tibia, Fibula, Talus, Calcaneus, Musculus sternocleidomastoideus, Musculus trapezius, Musculus pectoralis major, Musculus deltoideus, Musculus biceps brachii, Musculus rectus abdominis, Musculus obliquus externus abdominis, Musculus iliopsoas, Musculus gluteus maximus, Musculus sartorius, Musculus quadriceps femoris, Musculus biceps femoris, Musculus gastrocnemius, Ligamentum inguinale, Articulatio coxae, Articulatio genus, Articulatio talocruralis. Place the labels naturally around the figure, balancing readability and visual elegance. The text should look authentic, slightly imperfect, with subtle ink bleed, uneven typewriter spacing, and small alignment irregularities. Include a small archival caption at the bottom of the page, such as “Tabula Anatomica — Figura I”, “Studium Corporis Humani”, or “Atlas Anatomicus Vetus”. Do not use Japanese labels unless specifically requested; prioritize Latin anatomical nomenclature. Lighting should be soft and flat like a scanned antique page. The final result must feel like a scholarly anatomical illustration, not a modern infographic. High detail, precise linework, aged paper texture, anatomical accuracy, elegant composition, subtle red muscle fibers, pale blue veins, ivory bone rendering, dark graphite outlines, old medical atlas atmosphere, realistic printed-page imperfections.

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View original sourceVintage Medical Anatomical Book Plate AI Prompt
Transforms any input character or pose into a detailed 19th-century style medical anatomical textbook illustration with Latin labels.
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- 4Tweak the subject, style, or details and regenerate until it’s right.
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