NanoBanana prompts: Use these prompts to make stunning images
To get stunning images with nanobanana2, the key is not “more words”—it’s writing prompts like an executable production brief: what the subject is, what the image must communicate, how the layout should work, what text must be accurate, and what output specs you need.

1) A reusable prompt framework
Use the same 6 modules for almost any scene:
- Goal: what you’re making (infographic / poster / storyboard / collage / document scan)
- Subject: person / product / scene / object (add a clean reference when needed)
- Layout: grid, columns, text area ratio, whitespace, alignment
- Look: materials, palette, lens, lighting, grain, paper texture
- Text constraints: language, typography style, spelling accuracy, hierarchy
- Output specs: aspect ratio, resolution, use case (e-commerce / social / print)
Tip: if you need reliable text, explicitly require fully readable text, no garbled characters, no deformation.
2) 7 high-frequency prompt templates (copy & edit)
Replace placeholders like [PRODUCT] or [QUOTE] and iterate.
1) Product infographic (exploded view / cutaway)
Create a high-resolution product infographic for [PRODUCT]. White studio background. Photorealistic 3D product render with a black technical annotation overlay (thin lines, arrows, numbers, labels). Optional exploded view or cutaway. Constraints: labels must not cover the product; all text must be readable and correctly spelled; black-and-white annotation only; no watermark. Output 1:1, 2048×2048.
2) Wide quote card (reusable EN/中文)
Design a wide quote card: portrait on the left (1/3), text area on the right (2/3). Low-saturation brown paper background. Light-gold serif typography with clear hierarchy. Quote: “[QUOTE]”. Author line: “—[AUTHOR]”. Constraints: text must be perfectly readable, no typos, no distortion, generous whitespace. Output 16:9, 4K.
3) 2×2 collage (same identity across panels)
Create a 2×2 photo collage: the same character appears in four different scenes while keeping identity consistent (face, hairstyle, outfit). Unified fashion-magazine color grading. The four panels together form a readable phrase “[PHRASE]” (each panel contributes part of the lettering). Output 1:1, 2048×2048.
4) Vintage patent / archive document look
Generate a late-19th-century vintage patent document image: aged paper texture, fold marks, light stains, embossed stamp. Main content is a technical ink drawing for [INVENTION] with numbering and handwritten annotations. Constraints: lines are crisp; annotations readable; looks like a scanned museum archive. Output 4:3, high-res, no watermark.
5) “Room selfie” mirror scene (photorealistic)
Photorealistic mirror selfie: a woman in a blue-toned desktop corner taking a mirror selfie. Specify environment details (devices, LED strip, keyboard, posters, curtains textures). Soft mixed indoor lighting, 35mm lens. Constraints: natural skin texture, correct fingers, background detailed but not distracting. Output 3:4, 2048×2732.
6) Premium product key visual (minimal, low-angle)
Create a premium 3D brand key visual: low-angle perspective, a “giant hero product” as a stage, a confident hero character standing on it. Minimal background with cinematic volumetric light. Emphasize metal/glass reflections and fine texture. Constraints: no trademarked logos, no watermark. Output 16:9, 4K.
7) Storyboard / emotion grid (multi-panel)
Generate a 7-panel emotion grid storyboard: each panel has a different gradient background representing an emotion (joy, shock, serious, affectionate, confident, friendly, sadness). Keep the same character identity consistent across all panels. Layout must be perfectly aligned, equal spacing, no text. Output 16:9, high-res.
3) Iterate faster with fewer “rerolls”
- Lock layout first, then change style in the next iteration.
- Add small text only after the first version is structurally correct.
- Write “must-not-change” items as hard constraints (identity, logo position, exact wording).
4) One-click nanobanana entry
Use the same templates repeatedly and build your own prompt library.
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