Boyfriend POV Seaside Sunset Date

Full prompt
Photorealistic boyfriend-perspective summer date scene featuring an {argument name="subject" default="adult woman"}.
Image logic: the upward gaze must come from true boyfriend-perspective camera placement. The boyfriend is about 30 cm taller, and the camera must sit at his actual eye level so she is clearly looking up at him from below. The emotional core is a sweet affectionate upward gaze with a gently spoiled expression, created by real height difference and close romantic distance.
Background identity: a vivid {argument name="location" default="seaside boardwalk at sunset"} in midsummer, with a wide peach-pink-lavender sky, white railings, weathered wooden decking, reflective sea water, a distant Ferris wheel, small amusement lights beginning to glow, layered coastal buildings, and a soft evening breeze. The background should feel romantic and layered rather than like a flat sunset backdrop.
Depth lock: in the foreground, a softly blurred railing corner, boardwalk post, or sea-light reflection enters close to the lens. In the middle ground, the subject stands near the inside edge of the railing, very close to the camera. In the background, receding boardwalk lines, the Ferris wheel, layered buildings, sea horizon, and sunset sky create strong depth.
True boyfriend-POV camera lock: the camera is not a third-person observer and not a fashion-editorial camera. The lens is placed exactly where the taller boyfriend’s eyes would be, about 30 cm above her eye line, at very close conversational distance, approximately 45 to 60 cm from her face. Use a clearly readable downward viewing angle of about 18 to 24 degrees. The camera is positioned slightly in front of and just outside her near shoulder, as though her taller boyfriend has stepped close beside her and is looking down at her from his own real eye level. Frame from upper waist or lower chest to above the head. Her eyes and face must sit clearly below the lens, so the upward gaze is structurally unavoidable. Do not use a flat eye-level angle, do not use an observer camera, and do not use a neutral portrait camera.
Pose lock: the subject has paused beside the railing while still oriented along the boardwalk. Her weight rests naturally on one leg, with the other foot slightly behind and mostly outside the crop. The torso remains mostly aligned with the walkway rather than turning fully into a portrait pose. One hand rests lightly on the railing behind or beside her hip as a simple support point. The other arm remains relaxed along the body and may be partially cropped or partially hidden. Shoulders stay lowered and natural.
Upward-gaze lock: because the lens is truly above her, she looks clearly upward toward the camera from below. Her face remains in a soft three-quarter angle, not frontal. The head turns only a little toward him, while the eyes lift distinctly upward to the higher lens. Ke
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