Welcome to Codex render I – From Thought to Zone | with a Result
Welcome to Noverra’s visual core.
This page demonstrates how an image emerges from rhythm, not style. Here you’ll learn how to create a rendering that’s accurate—not just technically, but also symbolically. No loose images, no decorative flair, but a zone where color, pose, and glitch converge to create a visual statement.
We start with the idea: what do you want to resonate?
We build through color codes and style changes, fine-tune the technique, and end with a rendering that doesn’t illustrate, but carries.
This isn’t a tutorial (or at least it’s not). This is a codex line.
This isn’t an explanation (or at least it is :)). This is a rhythmic route.
Scroll down to discover how to get from idea to image—without deviation, without shifting style. And once you’ve mastered this, you’re ready for the next step: mutating zones (your final result).
🎨 Codexrender I – From Thought to Image
An image isn’t created by chance, but by rhythm. In Noverra, style isn’t a genre, but grammar (well, you don’t press pre-printed buttons that do the work for you). This page shows you how to build a visually coherent image—from your idea (in this case, mine) to rendering—without straying into other styles or settings.
1. The Thought
Everything starts with an idea. Not “what do I want to see?”, but “what do I want to resonate?”
In this example:
A Rococo lady as the bearer of stylistic mutation, placed in a cyberpunk-meets-Art Deco village.
The image must be rhythmically charged: color code, posture, glitch, architecture.
So you don’t just choose a style, but a rhythmic collision of styles that together form a zone .
🎨 2. The Color Codex
Color isn’t decoration—it’s grammar. Here are the colors and their functions:
- Teal & Gold → Rococo depth and transcendence
- Pastel Pink → Frivolous Rococo accents
- Neon Blue → Cyberpunk glitch
- Black & White → Mystical silence and visual breathing space
These colors should not only be present but also placed rhythmically within the image (and in your prompt).
3. The Style Mutation
You work with three styles that do not merge, but rather clash and balance:
- Rococo → clothing, posture, ornamentation
- Cyberpunk → implants, neon, glitch texture
- Art Deco → architecture, geometry, visual mass
Stylistic mutation is not a mixture — it is a rhythmic tension that comes to harmony.
4. The Technology
To generate the image use:
- Model: Architecture (RealVisXL5)
- Ratio: 1256 × 840 (3:2)
- Steps: 60
- CFG: 8
- Active LoRAs :
Cyberpunk_Techno-Mages_SDXL(0.5)Art_Deco(0.5)artdecopostsdxl(0.55)add-detail-xl(0.55)Hands(0.5)Super_Eye_Detailer(0.35)
These settings provide a balance between detail, style, and control. (You can deviate from these, but that will affect your final result, your image.)
5. Prompt
This is the text that drives the image:
A Rococo-era woman in an elaborate teal and gold brocade gown, with pastel pink ribbons, lace cuffs, and an ornate hairstyle adorned with blue roses and golden filigree. Her posture is upright and ceremonial. She stands in front of a cyberpunk Art Deco cityscape with domed buildings, neon blue lights, and angular architecture. Her mechanical implants blend into her Rococo attire, glowing softly. The scene is layered in teal, gold, pastel pink, neon blue, and black. Style clash becomes ritual harmony.
This prompt is rhythmically structured and aligns with the color codex and style mutation.
✅ 6. The Result
Render #3 in the series is the successful image. It shows:
- The right color balance
- A visually rhythmic composition
- Style mutation without deviation
- Breathing space and glitch as ritual
The image is not a portrait — it is a zone.

🔜 Next Step
Now that you know how to build a render, you can move on to:
- Creating mutation variants : for example with more glitch, different pose, or extra figures
- Setting up a visual codex page where you show multiple renders as a rhythmic sequence
- Writing a rhythmic description for each image, so that they not only show but explain
Don’t let this image simply speak—let it rhythmically explain . You monitor, the system resonates.
This page forms the foundation. The next step is mutating zones—variants, echoes, rhythmic imprints. See “Codexrender II”
