Try GPT Image 2 on iMini AI

Writing the perfect AI image prompt can feel like guesswork — until you see the difference side by side. This guide breaks down 10 prompt styles with exact examples you can copy, so you know exactly what changes the result.

1. Simple vs. Detailed Description

The most common mistake is being too vague. Specificity transforms a generic result into something actually usable.

AI image generated with detailed prompt: golden retriever on beach at golden hourAI image generated with simple prompt: a dog on a beach

Before
Prompt: A dog on a beach
After
Prompt: A golden retriever sitting on a sunny beach at golden hour, waves in the background, shallow depth of field, photorealistic

Generate it for free →

2. Photorealistic vs. Illustration Style

A single style keyword shifts the entire aesthetic. Decide which direction fits your goal before writing anything else.

Photorealistic AI image of a futuristic cityFlat illustration style AI image of a futuristic city

Photorealistic
Prompt: A futuristic city, photorealistic, ultra-detailed, 8k
Illustration
Prompt: A futuristic city, flat illustration, pastel colors, vector art style

Generate it for free →

3. No Lighting Direction vs. Cinematic Lighting

Lighting is the most underused prompt lever. A single lighting keyword changes the mood entirely.

AI portrait with no lighting direction specifiedAI portrait with dramatic side lighting and film noir style

No lighting
Prompt: Portrait of a woman, professional photo
With lighting
Prompt: Portrait of a woman, dramatic side lighting, film noir, 35mm lens, professional photography

Generate it for free →

4. No Mood vs. Defined Atmosphere

Emotional keywords tell the model what to prioritize in texture, color, and composition. They do more work than you expect.

AI image of a forest path with no mood specifiedAI image of a misty ethereal forest path at dawn

No mood
Prompt: A forest path
With atmosphere
Prompt: A misty forest path at dawn, ethereal, soft light filtering through trees, peaceful and mysterious atmosphere

Generate it for free →

5. Literal Description vs. Style Reference

Referencing a visual style — a director, an era, a design movement — beats describing every detail one by one.

AI image of a coffee shop interior with literal promptAI image of a coffee shop with Wes Anderson aesthetic style

Literal
Prompt: A coffee shop interior
Style reference
Prompt: A cozy coffee shop interior, Wes Anderson aesthetic, symmetrical composition, warm pastel tones, film photography

Generate it for free →

6. No Color Palette vs. Locked Color Palette

Without color direction, the model guesses. Specifying a palette gives you consistent, intentional output every time.

AI product shot of a perfume bottle with no color directionAI perfume bottle product shot with monochromatic purple palette

No palette
Prompt: A product shot of a perfume bottle
With palette
Prompt: A perfume bottle product shot, monochromatic purple palette, studio lighting, minimalist background, luxury editorial style

Generate it for free →

7. Generic Background vs. Specific Environment

Background context shapes the entire logic of a scene — the lighting, the shadows, the mood, and what feels believable.

AI image of a generic robot character with no background contextAI robot character in a neon-lit Tokyo alleyway at night

Generic
Prompt: A robot character
Specific environment
Prompt: A friendly robot character standing in a cluttered Tokyo alleyway at night, neon reflections on wet pavement, cyberpunk style

Generate it for free →

8. No Camera Angle vs. Defined Perspective

Camera direction is a free variable that most people skip. Defining it gives you immediate control over drama and scale.

AI image of a skyscraper with no camera angle specifiedAI worm’s-eye view of a glass skyscraper from street level

No angle
Prompt: A skyscraper
Defined angle
Prompt: Looking up at a glass skyscraper from street level, dramatic worm’s-eye view, dramatic sky, architectural photography

Generate it for free →

9. Default Daytime vs. Time of Day Override

Time of day sets lighting, color palette, and mood in a single instruction. It is one of the highest-leverage additions you can make.

AI image of a mountain landscape in default daytime lightingAI mountain landscape at blue hour with deep indigo sky

Default (daytime)
Prompt: A mountain landscape
With time override
Prompt: A mountain landscape at blue hour, just after sunset, deep indigo sky, snow-capped peaks glowing with last light, long exposure photography

Generate it for free →

10. No Exclusions vs. Explicit Negative Instructions

Telling the model what not to include is just as powerful as telling it what you want. Use exclusions to clean up stubborn clutter.

AI workspace flat lay image with no exclusion instructionsAI minimalist workspace flat lay with explicit exclusion instructions

No exclusions
Prompt: A clean workspace flat lay, top-down view
With exclusions
Prompt: A clean workspace flat lay, top-down view, no people, no clutter, no shadows, minimalist, only keyboard and notebook

Generate it for free →

Mastering AI image prompts is about giving the model fewer choices, not more freedom. Start with style plus lighting plus color, and build from there. If you want to run multiple AI image models and compare results instantly, iMini AI lets you generate across different models in one canvas — no tab-switching needed.