About Town

I had my quarterly doctor’s appointment today at 11:30 am. While sitting in the waiting room, I noticed a woman sitting across from me. Yep, I thought she might make a good cartoon, and she did. I also looked out the large window and saw two women getting out of their vehicle to come inside, another two. And finally as I sat in one of the examination rooms, I took another photo. Seems like some things seem more real when I have the AI cartoon them.


After I left the doctor, I headed over to Valero to get some gas.


Then on to downtown Fayetteville and toward the Market House. It now has a shiny new copper roof.


Now where can I find some work vehicles to take pictures of? Oh yes, Fayetteville.


And I stopped in to get a couple of egg rolls for lunch.


It’s a traditional decorative Chinese motif figure — the kind commonly printed on wax paper, pastry wrappers, take-out liners, lanterns, or festival packaging.

She’s basically a stylized classical Chinese maiden (or celestial lady), sometimes loosely interpreted as a court lady, a dancer, a musician, a moon-festival style fairy or a generic “immortal maiden” from Chinese art.

These designs come from traditional ink-line illustrations inspired by Tang / Song dynasty art styles. They’re meant to evoke elegance and culture — not a specific person.

When I created the colored 3D version, the system had to interpret the line art. The pose (sitting on clouds, moon, flowing ribbons, flute) strongly resembles the Chinese moon goddess Chang’e, so the generator leaned toward that mythology aesthetic — but your original wrapper drawing itself doesn’t name or uniquely depict her.