Sweet Dreams V3.1 -
One of the most frustrating aspects of AI art is the "fried" look caused by high CFG scales. v3.1 includes Dynamic Thresholding (DT) natively. You can now push CFG values up to 15 without destroying contrast or saturation. This allows for extremely prompt-adherent generations while maintaining a natural filmic quality.
Previous versions struggled with perspective geometry (think parallel lines converging incorrectly). Sweet Dreams v3.1 includes a latent constraint that subtly enforces vanishing point consistency. The result? Hallways, living rooms, and futuristic atriums that actually make structural sense. sweet dreams v3.1
“Sweet dreams” is both a wish and a public health aim. Achieving restorative sleep in the contemporary world requires biological understanding, cultural change, and policy measures that protect rest. Individually, we can cultivate habits and environments that favor sleep; collectively, we can redesign social systems to honor human rhythms. When sleep is protected, individuals thrive—clearer thinking, balanced emotions, and better health—and society gains productivity grounded in well-being rather than exhaustion. In this sense, dreaming sweetly is not mere private comfort but a marker of a healthier, more humane world. One of the most frustrating aspects of AI
(If you’d like a different tone, length, or academic formatting—e.g., MLA/APA—tell me which and I’ll revise.) Today’s sleep landscape is shaped by artificial light,
Today’s sleep landscape is shaped by artificial light, shift work, and an attention economy that prizes constant availability. Blue-rich screens suppress melatonin and delay sleep onset; 24/7 work cultures encourage fragmented rest; social media primes arousal and anxiety at bedtime. These forces have contributed to widespread sleep deprivation and a rise in disorders like insomnia. The consequences are societal as well as individual: reduced productivity, higher healthcare costs, and impaired public safety from fatigue-related errors. Addressing sleep loss thus requires systemic thinking—rethinking work hours, urban lighting, and cultural expectations around availability.