Inspirations Browse sample prompts, then load one into the workspace.
City Food Walk Illustrated Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Hangzhou West Lake food walk from Hubin Road to Hefang Street and Longjing Village, with stops for lotus root starch, scallion noodles, West Lake vinegar fish, tea desserts, and osmanthus cake.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: food-walk route with local dishes and stops.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Hangzhou West Lake food walk from Hubin Road to Hefang Street and Longjing Village, with stops for lotus root starch, scallion noodles, West Lake vinegar fish, tea desserts, and osmanthus cake. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: simplified route line, 6-8 food stops, large city title. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: cream paper, ink outlines, tomato red, jade green, golden accents. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Travel Map Posters can start from text only. Specify the subject, audience, ratio, short text that must appear, and elements to avoid.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageLandmark Route Poster Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Paris landmark route from the Louvre to the Seine, Notre-Dame, Latin Quarter, Luxembourg Garden, Eiffel Tower viewpoint, and Arc de Triomphe.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: major landmarks connected into one travel route.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Paris landmark route from the Louvre to the Seine, Notre-Dame, Latin Quarter, Luxembourg Garden, Eiffel Tower viewpoint, and Arc de Triomphe. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: sweeping route spine, numbered stops, compass and scale cue. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: sky blue, warm stone, olive green, red route accent. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, 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 ImageOld Town Walking Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Kyoto Higashiyama old town walking route through Kiyomizu-dera, Sannenzaka, Yasaka Pagoda, Gion lanes, Maruyama Park, and tea-house alleys.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: historic streets, cafes, shops, and quiet corners.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Kyoto Higashiyama old town walking route through Kiyomizu-dera, Sannenzaka, Yasaka Pagoda, Gion lanes, Maruyama Park, and tea-house alleys. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: compact neighborhood map, 5-7 stops, title block. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: aged paper, sepia ink, muted brick, moss green. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, 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 ImageCoastal Day Trip Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Xiamen coastal day trip along Shapowei, Yanwu Bridge viewpoint, Baicheng Beach, Huandao Road, Zengcuoan food lanes, and sunset pier.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: seaside route with beaches, lighthouse, boats, and seafood.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Xiamen coastal day trip along Shapowei, Yanwu Bridge viewpoint, Baicheng Beach, Huandao Road, Zengcuoan food lanes, and sunset pier. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: vertical coastline, route dots along shore, legend at bottom. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: aqua, sand, white, coral accent, watercolor texture. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Travel Map Posters can start from text only. Specify the subject, audience, ratio, short text that must appear, and elements to avoid.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageMountain Trail Illustrated Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Lauterbrunnen Valley mountain trail from the village station to Staubbach Falls, meadow paths, cable-car point, alpine huts, and cliff viewpoints.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: hiking trail with scenic highlights and viewpoints.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Lauterbrunnen Valley mountain trail from the village station to Staubbach Falls, meadow paths, cable-car point, alpine huts, and cliff viewpoints. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: winding trail bottom to top, elevation cue, open sky. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: pine green, stone gray, sky blue, warm orange trail. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, 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 ImageMuseum and Culture Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Shanghai museum and culture route across People Square, Shanghai Museum, Rockbund Art Museum, M50 art district, riverside bookshop, and Xintiandi gallery lane.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: culture route of museums, galleries, theaters, and historic sites.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Shanghai museum and culture route across People Square, Shanghai Museum, Rockbund Art Museum, M50 art district, riverside bookshop, and Xintiandi gallery lane. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: clean city-grid abstraction, ticket motif, 6 cultural stops. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: ivory, charcoal, muted burgundy, museum gold. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, 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 ImageNight Market Food Map Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Chongqing night market food route through Jiefangbei, Bayi Food Street, Hongya Cave, riverside hotpot alley, cableway viewpoint, and late-night noodle stall.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: night market route with stalls, lanterns, and signature foods.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Chongqing night market food route through Jiefangbei, Bayi Food Street, Hongya Cave, riverside hotpot alley, cableway viewpoint, and late-night noodle stall. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: dark poster, glowing route line, food icons, title at top. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: deep navy, lantern red, warm yellow, smoky violet. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, real logos, watermarks, distorted anatomy, low-resolution artifacts, cheap stock clichés, and visual noise.
Set aspect ratio to 9:16.
Why it works: Travel Map Posters can start from text only. Specify the subject, audience, ratio, short text that must appear, and elements to avoid.
How to adapt: Replace the subject, labels, ratio, and visual constraints while keeping this card's composition logic.
Create Similar ImageWeekend Memory Map Poster Create a 9:16 illustrated travel map poster for Barcelona weekend memory route from Gothic Quarter to La Boqueria, Casa Batllo, Passeig de Gracia, Park Guell, Barceloneta, and sunset harbor.
Scene fit: This scene should be decorative, useful, and collectible. It must be a clear illustrated map, not a GPS screenshot or messy postcard collage.
Visual direction: personal weekend itinerary map with keepsake feeling.
Subject treatment: Represent this specific route as a collectible illustrated map: Barcelona weekend memory route from Gothic Quarter to La Boqueria, Casa Batllo, Passeig de Gracia, Park Guell, Barceloneta, and sunset harbor. Landmarks, streets, food, nature, and culture stops should be simplified into coherent local icons that feel drawn for this place rather than generic travel clip art.
Composition: central route, three memory insets, title/date area. Use a vertical map, highlighted route, 5-8 stops, large place title, small legend, and readable spacing between icons.
Color and material: cream paper, soft blue, travel red, warm beige. Use refined lighting, controlled contrast, and coherent material texture that matches this scene.
Typography and labels: Use short readable place labels, stop numbers, and legend words only. No long itinerary paragraphs.
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 real map tiles, fake logos, too many street names, unreadable tiny labels, generic tourism icons, cluttered roads, 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 Image