
Photorealistic true first-person boyfriend-perspective amusement-park date scene featuring an adult woman. Image logic: this image is literally viewed from the taller boyfriend’s eyes. She is making direct eye contact with him through the high lens, and the visible upward gaze is created by the real 30 cm height difference. Background identity: a night amusement-park carousel plaza with an illuminated merry-go-round covered in warm golden bulbs, painted horses, glossy platform reflections, decorative poles, a low metal fence, colorful ride lights, distant amusement-park bokeh, and a dark blue night sky. The carousel should feel layered, luminous, romantic, and dimensional rather than like a flat wall of lights. Depth lock: in the foreground, a softly blurred fence post, carousel-light flare, or glossy pavement reflection enters near the lens. In the middle ground, the subject stands close beside the low carousel fence. In the background, multiple layers of carousel horses, illuminated poles, rotating platform details, distant park lights, and the night sky recede behind her. True boyfriend-eye camera lock: place the lens exactly at her boyfriend’s natural eye level, approximately 30 cm above her eye line and 40–55 cm from her face. Use a clearly downward angle of approximately 18–24 degrees. Position the camera slightly in front of her near shoulder, not beside her profile. Point the optical axis directly toward the center between her eyes. Frame from the upper waist or lower chest to slightly above the head. Her eyes must remain clearly below the lens. Pose lock: her pelvis remains angled toward the carousel at approximately 35–45 degrees. Both feet remain naturally grounded. One hand rests simply on the top of the low fence. The other arm stays relaxed beside the body and may be partially cropped. Her upper torso rotates slightly toward her boyfriend without becoming a frontal portrait. Keep the near shoulder subtly closer to the lens and the shoulders relaxed. Head-direction lock: turn her head toward the lens far enough for both eyes to be fully readable. Retain a soft three-quarter face angle, with the nose direction approximately 15–25 degrees away from full frontal. Do not keep her face pointed toward the carousel. Direct boyfriend-eye-contact lock: both pupils and irises point directly into the center of the camera lens, as though she is looking into her boyfriend’s eyes. She is not looking at the carousel, a horse, beside the camera, or beyond the lens. The higher lens causes a clearly upward eye angle. Keep the chin level or slightly tucked. Expression lock: a sweet, affectionate, gently spoiled expression, as if she wants him to ride again or stay close for another moment. Softened eyelids, slightly lifted inner brows, relaxed cheeks, softly closed
















