Browse free open source Python AI Image Generators for Linux and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Python AI Image Generators for Linux by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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    ComfyUI

    ComfyUI

    The most powerful and modular diffusion model GUI, api and backend

    The most powerful and modular diffusion model is GUI and backend. This UI will let you design and execute advanced stable diffusion pipelines using a graph/nodes/flowchart-based interface. We are a team dedicated to iterating and improving ComfyUI, supporting the ComfyUI ecosystem with tools like node manager, node registry, cli, automated testing, and public documentation. Open source AI models will win in the long run against closed models and we are only at the beginning. Our core mission is to advance and democratize AI tooling. We believe that the future of AI tooling is open-source and community-driven.
    Downloads: 371 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    AUTOMATIC1111 Stable Diffusion web UI
    AUTOMATIC1111's stable-diffusion-webui is a powerful, user-friendly web interface built on the Gradio library that allows users to easily interact with Stable Diffusion models for AI-powered image generation. Supporting both text-to-image (txt2img) and image-to-image (img2img) generation, this open-source UI offers a rich feature set including inpainting, outpainting, attention control, and multiple advanced upscaling options. With a flexible installation process across Windows, Linux, and Apple Silicon, plus support for GPUs and CPUs, it caters to a wide range of users—from hobbyists to professionals. The interface also supports prompt editing, batch processing, custom scripts, and many community extensions, making it a highly customizable and continually evolving platform for creative AI art generation.
    Downloads: 79 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    Big Sleep

    Big Sleep

    A simple command line tool for text to image generation

    A simple command line tool for text to image generation, using OpenAI's CLIP and a BigGAN. Ryan Murdock has done it again, combining OpenAI's CLIP and the generator from a BigGAN! This repository wraps up his work so it is easily accessible to anyone who owns a GPU. You will be able to have the GAN dream-up images using natural language with a one-line command in the terminal. User-made notebook with bug fixes and added features, like google drive integration. Images will be saved to wherever the command is invoked. If you have enough memory, you can also try using a bigger vision model released by OpenAI for improved generations. You can set the number of classes that you wish to restrict Big Sleep to use for the Big GAN with the --max-classes flag as follows (ex. 15 classes). This may lead to extra stability during training, at the cost of lost expressivity.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 4
    Lightweight' GAN

    Lightweight' GAN

    Implementation of 'lightweight' GAN, proposed in ICLR 2021

    Implementation of 'lightweight' GAN proposed in ICLR 2021, in Pytorch. The main contribution of the paper is a skip-layer excitation in the generator, paired with autoencoding self-supervised learning in the discriminator. Quoting the one-line summary "converge on single gpu with few hours' training, on 1024 resolution sub-hundred images". Augmentation is essential for Lightweight GAN to work effectively in a low data setting. You can test and see how your images will be augmented before they pass into a neural network (if you use augmentation). The general recommendation is to use suitable augs for your data and as many as possible, then after some time of training disable the most destructive (for image) augs. You can turn on automatic mixed precision with one flag --amp. You should expect it to be 33% faster and save up to 40% memory. Aim is an open-source experiment tracker that logs your training runs, and enables a beautiful UI to compare them.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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