Backrooms Pretty Girls Part 2

 


BY C STONE | THE SUPER HOT /||~ AI ART AND ENTERTAINMENT ~||\

I haven't seen the movie yet, and it just opened today at theatres in Calgary. 

And let's be honest: Who could resist the urge to generate new backroom photos, with even stranger, and pretty women?
 Certainly, if the backrooms was full of girls like these, I'd stay quite a long time.

The Backrooms is a viral internet horror concept and creepypasta describing a surreal, seemingly infinite alternate dimension of empty, mundane spaces. 

It is characterized by mono-yellow walls, the smell of damp carpet, the inescapable hum of fluorescent lights, and the lurking dread of unseen entities.

The Lore and Origins
The concept originated on 4chan in 2019 when an anonymous user posted an image of a dreary, unfurnished office space and added a chilling caption.
The Glitch: The premise relies on "no-clipping"—a video game term for glitching through a solid wall or boundary—causing an unfortunate person to fall out of our reality and into the Backrooms.
The Environment: It spans roughly 600 million square miles of randomly segmented, devoid rooms that stretch beyond standard time and space.
The Levels: As the internet mythology expanded, fans created a deep hierarchy of "levels" ranging from the basic yellow office rooms to endless suburban neighborhoods, subterranean pools, and dark, industrial corridors

Clearly, the yellow madness is back. I decided to add randomly colored stairs, plastic slides, and of course, random things on walls.

There's something soothing with the yellow color.
Stairway to The Super Hot's backrooms.


Some of these AI-generated photos are so strange I have no idea what the thought was behind them. I do think it's fairly accurate to the original lore.

I'm still not a fan of the yellow in all the photos. I like the red highlights. 


A liminal space is a place or state of transition—the "in-between" threshold between where you were and where you are going. The term originates from the Latin word limen, meaning "threshold."
 It can refer to physical locations (like a doorway or empty hallway) or psychological periods in life (like adolescence).

In contemporary culture and photography, "liminal space" refers to a specific aesthetic of transitional places—such as empty airport terminals, abandoned shopping malls, or deserted school hallways. 
These environments are typically bustling with people, so when seen completely deserted, they often evoke an unsettling, nostalgic, or dreamlike feeling.
The concept can be broken down into three main categories:
Physical Spaces: Designed as conduits rather than destinations.
Examples include stairwells, elevators, hotel corridors, waiting rooms, and highway rest stops.
Psychological Transitions: The uncomfortable, uncertain phase of a major life change or rite of passage. 
This includes periods like changing careers, ending a relationship, or grieving, where old habits are gone but a new identity hasn't fully formed.



Peace







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