Establishing Visual Creative Concepts:
Scene, Subject, and Style To achieve the best generative results and exercise more nuanced creative control over your scenes, make sure your prompts include the following key elements:
Subject: Who or what is the focus of the image? Please be specific. (For example: a cyberpunk elderly watchmaker with a face full of wrinkles, wearing multiple magnifying glasses; or a phoenix carved from transparent crystal.) Composition: How is the shot framed? (For example: god's-eye view/bird's-eye perspective, Dutch angle tilt, macro close-up, over-the-shoulder shot.) Action: What is happening in the scene? (For example: repairing a mechanical heart with precision tweezers, soaring through thunderclouds, playing the violin alone in the rain.) Location: Where does the story take place? (For example: neon-lit rainy streets of Tokyo, an overgrown abandoned Victorian greenhouse, a frozen lake beneath the aurora.) Style: What is the overall aesthetic tone? (For example: ukiyo-e woodblock print style, vaporwave art, claymation texture, 1980s sci-fi movie poster.) Editing Instructions: If you are modifying an existing image, be direct and specific. (For example: change the sky in the background to stormy weather, add sunglasses to the main character, remove the vase from the table.)