# Textual Inversion [[open-in-colab]] [Textual Inversion](https://arxiv.org/abs/2208.01618) is a technique for capturing novel concepts from a small number of example images. While the technique was originally demonstrated with a [latent diffusion model](https://github.com/CompVis/latent-diffusion), it has since been applied to other model variants like [Stable Diffusion](https://huggingface.co/docs/diffusers/main/en/conceptual/stable_diffusion). The learned concepts can be used to better control the images generated from text-to-image pipelines. It learns new "words" in the text encoder's embedding space, which are used within text prompts for personalized image generation. ![Textual Inversion example](https://textual-inversion.github.io/static/images/editing/colorful_teapot.JPG) By using just 3-5 images you can teach new concepts to a model such as Stable Diffusion for personalized image generation (image source). This guide will show you how to train a [`runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5`](https://huggingface.co/runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5) model with Textual Inversion. All the training scripts for Textual Inversion used in this guide can be found [here](https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/tree/main/examples/textual_inversion) if you're interested in taking a closer look at how things work under the hood. There is a community-created collection of trained Textual Inversion models in the [Stable Diffusion Textual Inversion Concepts Library](https://huggingface.co/sd-concepts-library) which are readily available for inference. Over time, this'll hopefully grow into a useful resource as more concepts are added! Before you begin, make sure you install the library's training dependencies: ```bash pip install diffusers accelerate transformers ``` After all the dependencies have been set up, initialize a [🤗Accelerate](https://github.com/huggingface/accelerate/) environment with: ```bash accelerate config ``` To setup a default 🤗 Accelerate environment without choosing any configurations: ```bash accelerate config default ``` Or if your environment doesn't support an interactive shell like a notebook, you can use: ```bash from accelerate.utils import write_basic_config write_basic_config() ``` Finally, you try and [install xFormers](https://huggingface.co/docs/diffusers/main/en/training/optimization/xformers) to reduce your memory footprint with xFormers memory-efficient attention. Once you have xFormers installed, add the `--enable_xformers_memory_efficient_attention` argument to the training script. xFormers is not supported for Flax. ## Upload model to Hub If you want to store your model on the Hub, add the following argument to the training script: ```bash --push_to_hub ``` ## Save and load checkpoints It is often a good idea to regularly save checkpoints of your model during training. This way, you can resume training from a saved checkpoint if your training is interrupted for any reason. To save a checkpoint, pass the following argument to the training script to save the full training state in a subfolder in `output_dir` every 500 steps: ```bash --checkpointing_steps=500 ``` To resume training from a saved checkpoint, pass the following argument to the training script and the specific checkpoint you'd like to resume from: ```bash --resume_from_checkpoint="checkpoint-1500" ``` ## Finetuning For your training dataset, download these [images of a cat statue](https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1fmJMs25nxS_rSNqS5hTcRdLem_YQXbq5) and store them in a directory. Set the `MODEL_NAME` environment variable to the model repository id, and the `DATA_DIR` environment variable to the path of the directory containing the images. Now you can launch the [training script](https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/blob/main/examples/textual_inversion/textual_inversion.py): 💡 A full training run takes ~1 hour on one V100 GPU. While you're waiting for the training to complete, feel free to check out [how Textual Inversion works](#how-it-works) in the section below if you're curious! ```bash export MODEL_NAME="runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5" export DATA_DIR="path-to-dir-containing-images" accelerate launch textual_inversion.py \ --pretrained_model_name_or_path=$MODEL_NAME \ --train_data_dir=$DATA_DIR \ --learnable_property="object" \ --placeholder_token="" --initializer_token="toy" \ --resolution=512 \ --train_batch_size=1 \ --gradient_accumulation_steps=4 \ --max_train_steps=3000 \ --learning_rate=5.0e-04 --scale_lr \ --lr_scheduler="constant" \ --lr_warmup_steps=0 \ --output_dir="textual_inversion_cat" ``` If you have access to TPUs, try out the [Flax training script](https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/blob/main/examples/textual_inversion/textual_inversion_flax.py) to train even faster (this'll also work for GPUs). With the same configuration settings, the Flax training script should be at least 70% faster than the PyTorch training script! ⚡️ Before you begin, make sure you install the Flax specific dependencies: ```bash pip install -U -r requirements_flax.txt ``` Then you can launch the [training script](https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/blob/main/examples/textual_inversion/textual_inversion_flax.py): ```bash export MODEL_NAME="duongna/stable-diffusion-v1-4-flax" export DATA_DIR="path-to-dir-containing-images" python textual_inversion_flax.py \ --pretrained_model_name_or_path=$MODEL_NAME \ --train_data_dir=$DATA_DIR \ --learnable_property="object" \ --placeholder_token="" --initializer_token="toy" \ --resolution=512 \ --train_batch_size=1 \ --max_train_steps=3000 \ --learning_rate=5.0e-04 --scale_lr \ --output_dir="textual_inversion_cat" ``` ### Intermediate logging If you're interested in following along with your model training progress, you can save the generated images from the training process. Add the following arguments to the training script to enable intermediate logging: - `validation_prompt`, the prompt used to generate samples (this is set to `None` by default and intermediate logging is disabled) - `num_validation_images`, the number of sample images to generate - `validation_steps`, the number of steps before generating `num_validation_images` from the `validation_prompt` ```bash --validation_prompt="A backpack" --num_validation_images=4 --validation_steps=100 ``` ## Inference Once you have trained a model, you can use it for inference with the [`StableDiffusionPipeline`]. Make sure you include the `placeholder_token` in your prompt, in this case, it is ``. ```python from diffusers import StableDiffusionPipeline model_id = "path-to-your-trained-model" pipe = StableDiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(model_id, torch_dtype=torch.float16).to("cuda") prompt = "A backpack" image = pipe(prompt, num_inference_steps=50, guidance_scale=7.5).images[0] image.save("cat-backpack.png") ``` ```python import jax import numpy as np from flax.jax_utils import replicate from flax.training.common_utils import shard from diffusers import FlaxStableDiffusionPipeline model_path = "path-to-your-trained-model" pipe, params = FlaxStableDiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(model_path, dtype=jax.numpy.bfloat16) prompt = "A backpack" prng_seed = jax.random.PRNGKey(0) num_inference_steps = 50 num_samples = jax.device_count() prompt = num_samples * [prompt] prompt_ids = pipeline.prepare_inputs(prompt) # shard inputs and rng params = replicate(params) prng_seed = jax.random.split(prng_seed, jax.device_count()) prompt_ids = shard(prompt_ids) images = pipeline(prompt_ids, params, prng_seed, num_inference_steps, jit=True).images images = pipeline.numpy_to_pil(np.asarray(images.reshape((num_samples,) + images.shape[-3:]))) image.save("cat-backpack.png") ``` ## How it works ![Diagram from the paper showing overview](https://textual-inversion.github.io/static/images/training/training.JPG) Architecture overview from the Textual Inversion blog post. Usually, text prompts are tokenized into an embedding before being passed to a model, which is often a transformer. Textual Inversion does something similar, but it learns a new token embedding, `v*`, from a special token `S*` in the diagram above. The model output is used to condition the diffusion model, which helps the diffusion model understand the prompt and new concepts from just a few example images. To do this, Textual Inversion uses a generator model and noisy versions of the training images. The generator tries to predict less noisy versions of the images, and the token embedding `v*` is optimized based on how well the generator does. If the token embedding successfully captures the new concept, it gives more useful information to the diffusion model and helps create clearer images with less noise. This optimization process typically occurs after several thousand steps of exposure to a variety of prompt and image variants.