Prompt-led generation

Text to Image for concepts, campaigns, and fast visual exploration

Start from a prompt, pick the right model, and move from rough idea to usable visual without switching tools. Built for teams who need quick exploration with fewer dead-end generations.

Prompt-led generation
Banana Studio
Prompt-first
Start from a brief, a headline, or a visual direction instead of a source asset.
Fast comparison
Test multiple models and styles without rebuilding your setup.
Best for

When you need a fresh frame, not a revision

Campaign ideation

Prototype multiple creative directions from the same brief before production starts.

Social covers and posters

Create bold layout-friendly visuals for announcements, launches, and social series.

Concept art and references

Generate mood, lighting, or scene options before a full creative handoff.

Prompt iteration

Keep the same working surface while you test wording, tone, and style changes.

Prompt moves

How teams usually structure a text-to-image run

Lead with the scene

State the subject, camera angle, and environment first so the composition anchors early.

Scene-first prompt

Call out the usage

Mention poster, hero banner, product ad, or social cover when the output needs a specific visual balance.

Use-case prompt

Refine in two passes

Lock the broad composition first, then add style and finish notes once the structure is right.

Two-pass prompt
Use it well

Keep prompt-only generations productive

Start broad, then tighten details after you see the first composition direction.
Use Nano Banana for fast loops and Seedream 4 when you want a more editorial aesthetic range.
Keep credit cost visible while you compare quality against speed.
Text-to-image FAQ

Questions about prompt-led image generation

Prompt-only workflow

Yes. Once you have a result you like, you can use it as a reference and keep iterating inside the same AI Image workspace.

Nano Banana is strong for speed, Nano Banana Pro adds more polish and control, and Seedream 4 is useful when you want a broader stylistic range.

Not always. Start with a clear subject, setting, and output goal. Add style or finish cues only after the composition direction is working.