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Use Image 1 as the main source that defines the final scene: keep the character’s identity, face, body proportions, hairstyle, outfit, accessories, interacting objects, environment, background, lighting, color palette, mood, texture and overall visual style consistent with this image. Image 2 should be treated only as a pose and camera reference for body position, camera placement, angle, framing, perspective distortion and facial expression.
Re-create the subject from Image 1 so that the body posture, limb position, torso direction, head tilt and emotional expression match the subject in Image 2, while fully preserving the look and identity from Image 1. The camera setup in the result must follow Image 2 as closely as possible: replicate camera height, distance to the subject, tilt direction, viewing angle and perspective behavior. If Image 2 uses a low‑angle, high‑angle, tilted camera, wide‑angle lens or strong foreground distortion, mirror these choices in the final image. The way the subject fills the frame, how close different body parts appear to the lens, and the overall framing and cropping should also follow Image 2.
While you adjust pose and camera perspective, keep all scene details from Image 1 unchanged: environment and background, lighting style and atmosphere, color grading, objects in the scene, wardrobe and artistic aesthetic. Any clothing or objects attached to the character should naturally follow the new pose with plausible folds, gravity and interaction with the body. Do not copy any environmental or stylistic elements from Image 2—only the pose, camera geometry, framing logic and emotional expression.
The final image should look as if the character and world from Image 1 were originally captured using the camera position, perspective and pose from Image 2, with clean integration, believable anatomy, correct shadows and consistent lighting. Generate a single edited image that keeps the same aspect ratio and resolution as Image 1.