Poster prompt
Create a launch poster for [product]. Use one exact headline, one short subheading, a central product visual, event-style spacing, and large readable typography.
Structured prompts for text-rich image layouts
Ready for gpt image 2.0
Create a bold poster with one dominant headline, one supporting line, a clear details block, and strong visual hierarchy for: GPT Image 2.0 prompt generator for creators. Target audience: designers, founders, marketers, and content teams. Primary text to render exactly: "GPT Image 2.0 Prompt Generator". Supporting text: "Turn rough ideas into structured prompts for posters, infographics, comics, and ads.". Art direction: premium consumer-tech; professional composition, crisp lighting, tasteful contrast, and finished design-system polish. Layout requirements: Balanced copy, 16:9 landscape, clear text zones, strong spacing rhythm, and no overlap between copy and key imagery. Must include: readable typography, clear spacing, polished layout, visual hierarchy. Avoid: misspelled text, crowded layout, tiny unreadable labels, distorted UI elements. Make all visible text large, legible, correctly spelled, and integrated naturally into the image layout.
Turn a rough idea into a structured gpt image 2 prompt for posters, infographics, comics, ads, and product visuals.
This page is operated by Banana AI Pro, an independent AI creation platform. It is not an official page of OpenAI and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by OpenAI. This page is a Banana AI prompt builder for organizing prompts that users can adapt for gpt image 2.0 workflows.
Text-heavy image prompts work better when they describe the finished design, not just the subject. The builder keeps format, visible copy, audience, layout rules, art direction, and quality checks in separate lines so the prompt is easier to review before you generate.
Name the exact format first: poster, infographic, comic page, social ad, product graphic, or editorial cover.
Write the headline, labels, callouts, and speech bubble text explicitly. Keep each line short enough to render cleanly.
Describe spacing, text zones, panel count, aspect ratio, and hierarchy before adding mood, lighting, or art direction.
Call out misspelled text, tiny labels, crowded spacing, overlapping elements, distorted UI, and unreadable typography.
Use these short examples as a starting point, then use the builder to add audience, aspect ratio, style, must-have details, and things to avoid.
Create a launch poster for [product]. Use one exact headline, one short subheading, a central product visual, event-style spacing, and large readable typography.
Create a one-page infographic about [topic]. Use a clear title, 4 labeled sections, concise labels, simple icons, strong visual hierarchy, and enough white space for scanning.
Create a 4-panel comic page about [story]. Keep the character design consistent, use readable speech bubbles, clear panel order, expressive poses, and a finished comic page layout.
Create a product marketing visual for [product]. Show the product as the hero, add 3 short feature callouts, keep all labels readable, and use a clean commercial layout.
Create a 4:5 social ad for [offer]. Use one benefit-led headline, one short proof point, a clear product or service visual, and a simple callout area with readable text.
Create an editorial cover about [topic]. Use a masthead-style title, one main headline, 2 short cover lines, a strong central image, and a balanced magazine layout.
Create a tri-fold brochure concept for [business]. Use clear front, inside, and back-panel zones, short section headings, contact details, and a clean print-ready layout.
Create a text-focused visual for [message]. Keep the exact words large and correctly spelled, use high contrast, leave generous margins, and avoid tiny decorative labels.
Start with the tool at the top of the page. The goal is not a longer prompt; it is a prompt with fewer missing decisions.
Start with a real deliverable: poster, infographic, comic, social ad, product graphic, or editorial cover. This anchors composition.
Add headline, short support copy, section count, aspect ratio, and label density so the output has enough structure.
Copy the finished prompt or open the image generator. If the first output is close, refine only spacing, spelling, hierarchy, or style.
The builder is most useful when the image needs readable words, controlled composition, or a specific visual format.
Build prompts for launch posters, product ads, campaign key visuals, feature graphics, and social creatives that need exact copy and clear hierarchy.
Turn a topic into an infographic prompt with labeled sections, icon ideas, spacing rules, and limits on how much copy appears in each block.
Draft comic pages, editorial covers, and storyboard-style prompts with panel flow, character consistency, captions, and readable speech bubbles.
It is a structured prompt builder for gpt image 2. Instead of writing one loose paragraph, you define the output type, exact text, audience, layout, style, and constraints, then copy a complete prompt into the image generator.
Prompts that describe the final visual format work best: poster, infographic, comic page, product visual, social ad, or editorial cover. The more clearly you define text placement, layout, and spacing, the easier the output is to refine.
Yes. Copy the generated prompt or open the Banana AI gpt image 2.0 generator from this page, then paste or refine the prompt before creating the final image.
Text-rich image prompts benefit from explicit negative constraints. Calling out misspellings, tiny labels, crowded spacing, and overlapping elements helps keep the output easier to read and edit.
No. Use templates when the image has structure, text, or layout requirements. For simple visual ideas, a short prompt may be enough.
Use your generated prompt in the Banana AI gpt image 2.0 image generator.