Inspirations Browse sample prompts, then load one into the workspace.
Celestial Deity Editorial Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Xi Wangmu, the Queen Mother of the West, holding a jade ritual tablet beside peach-blossom mist and Kunlun mountain geometry.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: regal celestial deity with museum-poster polish.
Subject treatment: Portray Xi Wangmu, the Queen Mother of the West, holding a jade ritual tablet beside peach-blossom mist and Kunlun mountain geometry. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: immortality peaches, jade authority, Kunlun terraces, ceremonial cloud halos. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: center or off-center hero portrait, halo architecture, layered mist. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: ink black, jade, antique gold, moon white, silk texture. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Eastern Myth Portraits can start from text details such as subject, place, story, and palette. Add references only when likeness or place memory matters.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageInk-and-Gold Immortal Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Lu Dongbin, the elegant Daoist immortal with a sword, wine gourd, wind-blown robe, and refined wanderer temperament.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: poetic immortal portrait with mineral gold linework.
Subject treatment: Portray Lu Dongbin, the elegant Daoist immortal with a sword, wine gourd, wind-blown robe, and refined wanderer temperament. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: flying sword arcs, gourd silhouette, drifting ink clouds, mineral-gold talisman lines. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: sweeping garment, empty ink wash, one strong symbolic shape. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: rice paper, black ink, mineral gold, cinnabar accent. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Swap the subject, place, product, person, title, and labels first. Keep composition, material, lighting, and constraint phrases intact.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageMythic Warrior Shrine Poster Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Nezha, the young mythic warrior with fire wheels, red silk sash, spear energy, and rebellious guardian spirit.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: powerful guardian or warrior shrine portrait.
Subject treatment: Portray Nezha, the young mythic warrior with fire wheels, red silk sash, spear energy, and rebellious guardian spirit. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: fire-wheel rings, red silk motion, spear vectors, lotus rebirth structure. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: low-angle pose, shrine fragments, diagonal energy lines. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: deep red, black lacquer, aged bronze, smoky gray. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: For publishable output, state 9:16, title space, whitespace, and readable label rules so the model avoids dense microtext.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageMoon Palace Dream Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Chang e, the Moon Palace goddess with white silk sleeves, jade rabbit aura, osmanthus shadow, and quiet lunar loneliness.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: ethereal moon-palace portrait with longing and grace.
Subject treatment: Portray Chang e, the Moon Palace goddess with white silk sleeves, jade rabbit aura, osmanthus shadow, and quiet lunar loneliness. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: moon disk, osmanthus branches, jade rabbit trace, porcelain-white silk layers. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: large moon disk, soft palace geometry, clouds, spacious glow. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: pearl white, pale jade, silver blue, soft gold. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Eastern Myth Portraits can start from text details such as subject, place, story, and palette. Add references only when likeness or place memory matters.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageDemon-Subduing Guardian Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Zhong Kui, the demon-subduing guardian with stern scholar face, ritual sword, crimson robe, and protective threshold power.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: ritual authority with talisman rhythm and controlled fire or smoke.
Subject treatment: Portray Zhong Kui, the demon-subduing guardian with stern scholar face, ritual sword, crimson robe, and protective threshold power. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: seal stamps, sword geometry, guardian gate shadows, cinnabar exorcism marks. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: front or three-quarter pose, talisman strips, dark empty background. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: charcoal, cinnabar, old gold, bone white. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Swap the subject, place, product, person, title, and labels first. Keep composition, material, lighting, and constraint phrases intact.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageRiver Spirit Luxury Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Fu Fei, the Luo River goddess, emerging from misted water with flowing sleeves, pearl light, and river-current grace.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: fluid water-associated myth portrait.
Subject treatment: Portray Fu Fei, the Luo River goddess, emerging from misted water with flowing sleeves, pearl light, and river-current grace. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: river ribbons, pearl droplets, wave diagrams, translucent silk currents. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: S-curve robes, reflective negative space, water ribbons. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: deep teal, pearl, wet jade, silver highlights. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: For publishable output, state 9:16, title space, whitespace, and readable label rules so the model avoids dense microtext.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageFire Phoenix Myth Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for a regal Fenghuang phoenix empress with flame-feather crown, celestial plumage, and rebirth symbolism.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: radiant rebirth portrait with phoenix-like flame geometry.
Subject treatment: Portray a regal Fenghuang phoenix empress with flame-feather crown, celestial plumage, and rebirth symbolism. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: phoenix feather fans, ember gradients, sun-ring geometry, lacquer-red ceremonial ornaments. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: vertical pose, phoenix arc behind, controlled flame feathers. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: black, ember orange, cinnabar, antique gold. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Eastern Myth Portraits can start from text details such as subject, place, story, and palette. Add references only when likeness or place memory matters.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageScholar Sage Myth Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Wen Chang Dijun, the scholar deity of literature, surrounded by brush light, star charts, books, and calm intellectual authority.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: wise sage or poet portrait with quiet intellect.
Subject treatment: Portray Wen Chang Dijun, the scholar deity of literature, surrounded by brush light, star charts, books, and calm intellectual authority. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: brushstroke constellations, scroll grids, ink stars, carved scholar-stone forms. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: seated or standing figure, ink landscape, scroll detail. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: warm paper, ink black, muted moss, aged ivory. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Swap the subject, place, product, person, title, and labels first. Keep composition, material, lighting, and constraint phrases intact.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageAvant-Garde Myth Fashion Portrait Create a 9:16 luxury Eastern myth portrait poster for Mazu, the sea-protecting goddess, redesigned as an avant-garde mythic fashion portrait with wave armor, lantern light, and maritime devotion.
Scene fit: This scene should be ornate, sacred, poetic, and cinematic. It can be opulent, but every symbol must serve the mythic identity rather than becoming random decoration.
Visual direction: myth-inspired couture portrait with symbolic deconstruction.
Subject treatment: Portray Mazu, the sea-protecting goddess, redesigned as an avant-garde mythic fashion portrait with wave armor, lantern light, and maritime devotion. First understand the figure's identity, power, temperament, story, and symbolic elements, then translate 2-4 motifs into costume, light, background geometry, and atmosphere: wave grids, red lantern glow, compass lines, sea-silk panels. Keep the mythic identity recognizable without turning the image into a literal symbol pile.
Composition: asymmetric full or half-body crop, fabric planes, large motif. Use a strong vertical portrait, clear face and silhouette, one dominant symbolic structure, layered mist or fabric, and controlled ornamental detail.
Color and material: ivory, black, jade or cinnabar, metallic thread. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use only a short title, seal-like mark, or minimal poetic label if needed. No dense lore text.
Quality rules: The subject and background must form one intentional visual system. Make the prompt result match the template scene first: use ornate detail only where the scene calls for it, and use simplicity where clarity matters. Avoid cheap game splash art, random dragons, overloaded ornaments, neon fantasy clutter, fake historical paragraphs, messy symbols, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: For publishable output, state 9:16, title space, whitespace, and readable label rules so the model avoids dense microtext.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar Image