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Documentation Index

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Dossier with crowned Primary Look
When you generate variations of an entity, Loraverse stores every result. Some will be drafts. Some will be experiments. One will be the version you actually want to use everywhere else. That preferred version is what you mark as . For characters, canonical works in two layers:

Crown the Primary Look

The single most trusted reference. The hero portrait. The image that defines the character visually.

Pin additional references

Different angles, expressions, wardrobe variations, poses. The supporting cast of references that rounds out the character’s range.
Crowning and pinning aren’t bookkeeping. They’re production decisions. They tell Loraverse: use these when this entity appears anywhere else. The same principle applies to environments, props, and styles. A location has its canonical look. A style has its canonical reference. Once you mark canonical, every downstream use — casting into a scene, mentioning in the Command Bar, generating a shot — pulls from your trusted versions. This is the mechanism of decisions compound. Every time you mark a generation as canonical, you’re narrowing what the next generation has to figure out from scratch. Continuity gets sharper. Drift drops. The work moves forward instead of looping back. Canonical is reversible. Better versions emerge. Crown the new one. The entity updates.