KEEP ORIGINAL FACE / DO NOT ALTER FACIAL IDENTITY


Ultra-realistic cinematic editorial shot, vertical 9:16.


Subject caught knee-deep in dark, restless water, body turned three-quarters away from the camera while the head twists back sharply, gaze locked straight into the lens. Pose low and grounded: one knee pressed into the shallow surf, hips sunk slightly, spine arched naturally, shoulders pulled back. The movement feels interrupted mid-moment, as if the wave just hit her.


Outfit — exact:

A black, body-hugging cut-out suit with long fitted sleeves, matte fabric that darkens when wet. Open back with thin straps tying at the shoulder blades. The material clings unevenly from the water, creating tension across the waist and hips. No shine, no latex, no stylization — real wet fabric behavior.


Hair: loose, windswept, heavy with moisture. One side falls forward, partially covering the face, strands sticking to skin. No symmetry.


Environment:

Open water at dusk. The sea is dark slate-blue, textured with choppy waves and white foam breaking around her legs. Foreground water splashes upward, frozen mid-spray. Horizon line low and distant.


Sky — exact:

Heavy, dramatic storm clouds layered in deep blue-gray tones. No sunset colors. Overcast, moody, threatening. The sky feels dense and low, pressing down on the scene.


Lighting:

Natural low light from the sky combined with a subtle, hard directional light that cuts across the face and shoulder, carving cheekbones and eyes. No soft fill. Highlights are controlled, shadows deep and cinematic. Water reflections flicker on skin and fabric.


Atmosphere:

Cold, sensual, dangerous calm. Wind, water, and tension in the body. Editorial, raw, real — not glossy, not clean, not AI-smooth. The moment feels physical and alive.


No text, no logos, no glamour lighting, no symmetry, no illustration.

If it feels like a fashion film still shot in real water under real weather — it’s correct.