The Photorealistic style produces frames indistinguishable from professional photography. Documentary authenticity, accurate physics, and true-to-life textures.
Light bounces, shadows fall correctly, water reflects, fabric drapes. Photorealistic prompts benefit from physical accuracy — describe materials, surfaces, and light behavior.
Human skin, natural stone, weathered wood, wet concrete — these complex textures are where photorealism shines and other styles struggle.
Real documentary and journalism aesthetics: slightly imperfect framing, available light, authentic environments without set-dressing artificiality.
Dust particles in light shafts, water droplets on glass, worn edges, natural aging — environmental detail signals "this is real" to the viewer's eye.
The golden hour effect, blue hour (twilight) color cast, window light diffusion, overcast flat light — natural lighting patterns read as authentic.
Accurate perspective and correct scale of objects in relation to humans establishes photographic plausibility. Mention camera height and focal length.