

Based on the input character image, design a "fictional banknote" that looks as if it would really circulate in the world where this character lives. Important: the goal is not merely to place the character illustration onto a bill, but to reconstruct it into a highly finished design like a real banknote that reflects the character's worldview, affiliation, values, culture, aesthetics, and authority. First, read from the image: hair, eye, and clothing colors; decorative motifs; attribute (angel, demon, witch, knight, water, flower, star, Japanese style, cyber, etc.); personality and impression (noble, cute, mysterious, uneasy, elegant, cold, bright); the nation, order, kingdom, company, organization, or mage league it might belong to; and the value it might symbolize (prayer, power, knowledge, prosperity, pact, salvation, dream, memory). From this, create an original banknote including: a horizontal composition; the character integrated naturally as the banknote portrait (frontal or profile, with dignity and symbolism); a denomination; a fictional currency unit (e.g. Luna, Crown, Arc, Floren, Aster, Noct, chosen to fit the world); fictional names for the issuing institution, kingdom, city, order, or mage academy; precise decorative frames, fine lines, crests, ornamental patterns, and micro-patterns; security-like elements such as watermarks, holographic effects, seals, magic-circle security, and geometric ornament; symbolic reverse-side motifs (castle, tower, flower, feather, gear, moon, ripples, constellations, theater, cathedral, weapons, ancient relics); numbers, marks, signatures, and seals; information density and order like a real banknote; a sense of luxury, collectible value, and officialness. Important color rules: do not use the character's colors vividly and directly; convert the character's palette into muted colors reinterpreted as banknote ink; keep the total number of colors restrained, using a limited banknote-like palette; the main color should be subdued (sage green, olive, teal, gray-blue, muted purple, smoky blue, brown-gray, sepia, deep navy, dark reddish-brown); character-derived colors appear only discreetly in seals, crests, denomination, hologram, or accent ornaments; avoid fluorescent, vivid, and highly saturated anime-paint colors; prioritize a "banknote-like color design" that conveys paper base color, printing ink, aging, and fiber texture; overall aim for a refined, restrained color balance like real high-denomination, commemorative, or old foreign banknotes. Guidelines: the whole design must be convincing as the "official currency of the character's world"; avoid a cheap toy or mere-merch feel; don't just place a large face but integrate everything into the banknote's design; convey the character's charm through the portrait, crests, patterns, symbols, layout, and fine ornamentation rather than through bright color; aim for an engraving feel, intaglio-style lines, and a fine-carving-style portrait; intricate and ornate yet organized and legible; let cuteness, mystery, nobility, or decadence come through as a "banknote motif"; depending on the world, freely choose directions like a fantasy nation, holy kingdom, mage city, deep-sea kingdom, machine empire, city of flowers, or night order. Desired result: not "a colorful banknote themed on the character," but "a beautiful, narrative, high-detail fictional banknote officially issued by the central bank or kingdom of the world where the character exists, with restrained colors and dense ornamentation." Prioritize high detail, abundant information, intricate ornamentation, refinement, restrained color, banknote-like printing feel, and world credibility. Minimize the background so the banknote itself is the main subject. Not as a product or display photo, but showing the finished banknote design itself.
Based on the input character image, design a "fictional coin" that looks as if it would really circulate in the world where this character lives. Important: the goal is not merely to place the character illustration onto a coin, but to reconstruct it into a design as finished as a real commemorative or circulating coin that reflects the character's worldview, affiliation, values, culture, authority, and aesthetics. First, read from the image: hair, eye, and clothing colors; decorative motifs; attribute (angel, demon, witch, knight, water, flower, star, Japanese style, cyber, etc.); personality and impression (noble, cute, mysterious, uneasy, elegant, cold, bright); the nation, kingdom, order, company, organization, or mage league it might belong to; and the value it might symbolize (prayer, power, knowledge, prosperity, pact, salvation, dream, memory). From this, create an original coin design including: a composition with the coin itself as the main subject; a circular or polygonal coin design; optionally showing both obverse and reverse; the character integrated naturally as the coin's portrait, profile, side-facing relief, or symbolic silhouette; a denomination; a fictional currency unit (e.g. Crown, Arc, Floren, Aster, Noct, Luna, chosen to fit the world); fictional names for the nation, kingdom, order, city, or issuing institution; struck-style symbolic motifs (crest, flower, feather, horn, ripples, gear, star, moon, weapons, ancient script); edge ornamentation, reeding, fine reliefs, rim lettering, year, signature, and seals; clear materiality (gold, silver, bronze, black-silver, platinum coin, magic metal, iridescent metal); both the credibility of a circulating coin and a collectible design quality; intricate three-dimensional carving, metallic reflections, and moderate wear and cast feel. Guidelines: the whole design must be convincing as the "official currency of the character's world"; avoid a cheap-merch or mere-medal feel; don't paste the face as-is but reconstruct it as the coin's relief design; adjust color and metallic feel to reflect the character's palette and attributes while harmonizing them into a beautiful coin; aim not only for cuteness but for authority, mystery, historicity, tradition, and prestige; depending on the world, freely choose directions like a holy kingdom's gold coin, a deep-sea kingdom's blue-silver coin, a night order's black coin, a machine empire's gear coin, or a city of flowers' commemorative silver coin. Desired result: not "a coin themed on the character," but "a beautiful, narrative, high-detail fictional coin officially issued by the nation or organization of the world where the character exists." Prioritize high detail, intricate ornamentation, three-dimensional relief, metallic texture, authority, collectible value, and world credibility. Keep the background as restrained as possible so the coin itself is the main subject. Not as a product photo, but shown as a finished coin design.