A cyberpunk reinterpretation inspired by Norman Rockwell’s “Rosie the Riveter.” A strong young woman sits confidently on a heavy metal beam, posed in classic heroic style. Her right arm is an advanced cybernetic limb — sleek plating, exposed servos, and integrated industrial components — ending not in a hand, but in a built-in riveting tool with subtle glowing indicators. She wears rugged workwear: reinforced overalls, utility belts with tools, layered pads, and a worn jacket with patches from various corporate labor crews. Her boots are scuffed and heavy, stained with grease and metal dust. Behind her hangs a stylized flag with only 16 stars, bold and sharply defined, symbolizing a fractured political landscape. The backdrop mixes industrial grit and faint city smog, with beams of warm light cutting through to highlight her determined expression. Her posture conveys pride, resilience, and hard-won competence. The composition echoes the strength of Rockwell’s original piece but with a futuristic labor-punk sensibility — a worker shaped by machinery and survival, yet still defiantly human.* Style: blend of Larry Elmore and H.R. Giger — Elmore’s painterly realism, strong figure rendering, warm lighting, and expressive face paired with Giger’s biomechanical textures and industrial-meets-organic design on the cybernetic arm and background tech. Cinematic detail, high texture, subtle metallic sheen, bold storytelling composition. Keywords for tuning: Elmore-style painterly See more