# Prompt Library and Useful Workflows Use these prompts to drive the project. ## 1. One-liner to full storybook **Prompt:** Turn this one-line idea into a short illustrated picture-book package. Give me: - 5 title options - the best direction - a 10–14 spread story draft - a repeated refrain if useful - a cover prompt - one illustration prompt per spread Idea: **[insert idea]** ## 2. One-liner to fast outline **Prompt:** Take this one-line idea and build a compact picture-book outline. Give me: - title options - main character - problem - emotional core - 10 spread beats - image ideas Idea: **[insert idea]** ## 3. Story-only mode **Prompt:** Write a short original picture-book story from this idea. Keep it playful, image-rich, child-friendly, and easy to read aloud. Break it into 10–12 spreads. Idea: **[insert idea]** ## 4. Rhyme-light version **Prompt:** Rewrite this picture-book draft with a stronger read-aloud bounce, light rhyme, playful repetition, and better page-turn rhythm, but do not force every line into exact rhyme. ## 5. Full-rhyme version **Prompt:** Rewrite this picture-book draft in clean child-friendly rhyme. Keep it readable, musical, and original. If a rhyme weakens the story, choose clarity first. ## 6. Visual punch-up **Prompt:** Revise this story to create stronger illustration moments on every spread. Add clearer visual gags, props, gestures, setting details, and repeated motifs without making the text too dense. ## 7. Simpler younger-kid version **Prompt:** Rewrite this story for a younger read-aloud audience. Use simpler language, shorter sentences, clearer repetition, and fewer complex turns. ## 8. Slightly older version **Prompt:** Rewrite this story for early independent readers. Keep the whimsy, but add slightly richer vocabulary and one extra layer of cleverness. ## 9. Character sheet build **Prompt:** Create a character sheet for the main lead of this picture-book idea. Include: - concept - visual identity - personality - key flaw - emotional strength - recurring gag - illustration notes - sequel potential ## 10. World sheet build **Prompt:** Create a mini world bible for this story’s setting. Keep it simple, visual, and picture-book friendly. Include: - location concept - visual motifs - rules of nonsense - recurring background details - future story potential ## 11. Illustration pack only **Prompt:** Create a full illustration pack for this picture-book story: - 1 cover prompt - 1 prompt per spread - 1 optional character reference sheet prompt Keep the prompts clean, visual, and easy for an image model to follow. ## 12. Refrain finder **Prompt:** Give me 15 repeated refrain ideas for this picture-book premise. They should be fun to say aloud and capable of changing meaning by the end. ## 13. Title finder **Prompt:** Give me 20 title options for this picture-book idea. Make them memorable, playful, marketable, and easy to say aloud. ## 14. Series extension **Prompt:** Turn this standalone picture-book idea into a repeatable mini-series. Give me: - series title options - recurring lead - recurring setting - 10 future book ideas - recurring visual motifs - repeated emotional promise ## 15. Story diagnosis **Prompt:** Review this picture-book draft and tell me: - where the read-aloud rhythm drags - where the visuals are weak - where the emotional payoff lands or fails - which lines are worth keeping - what to cut ## 16. Spread rebuilder **Prompt:** Take this story and rebuild it into a cleaner 12-spread structure with stronger page turns and a clearer ending. ## 17. Image-first drafting mode **Prompt:** Build this story from the pictures outward. First give me 10 spread image ideas, then write the text to match them. ## 18. Productive weirdness mode **Prompt:** Take this simple idea and make it stranger, funnier, and more visually inventive, but keep the story clear enough for ages 3–7. ## 19. Read-aloud polish **Prompt:** Polish this draft for live read-aloud use. Improve rhythm, repetition, and performance energy. Remove any lines that trip the tongue. ## 20. Minimal-text mode **Prompt:** Rewrite this as a very sparse picture book with short text and strong visual dependence. Keep only the most essential, memorable lines. ## Good reminder prompt **Prompt:** Before writing, restate the active rules for this project in 10 bullets: short compact storybook scale, image-heavy design, original whimsical tone, strong read-aloud flow, simple emotional core, clear spread structure, repeated phrase use when useful, child-safe content, visual-first scene design, and no direct imitation of existing authors.