# Image Prompt Guide for Storybooks Use this file when generating illustrations. ## Visual identity The art should feel: - playful - polished - bright - expressive - highly readable - full of shape and motion - child-friendly - storybook-rich ## Core visual rule These stories should be **image-heavy**. That means the prompts should not be vague wallpaper. Each prompt should clearly describe: - who is in the image - what they are doing - where they are - the mood - the visual gag or key detail - the colour / lighting feel if useful ## Best image workflow For each finished story, generate: - **1 cover prompt** - **8 to 12 spread prompts** - optionally **1 endpaper or title-page prompt** - optionally **1 character reference prompt** for recurring leads ## Prompt design rule A strong illustration prompt should include: - composition focus - key character pose or expression - environment - important props - story action - mood - style ## Good storybook style terms Useful style language: - cinematic storybook illustration - whimsical picture-book art - polished children’s book illustration - playful expressive character design - bright layered environment detail - family-safe fantasy whimsy - richly readable composition ## Good visual ingredients Use: - oversized objects - strong silhouettes - expressive weather - repeating motifs - silly background details - rich textures - colour-coded emotional beats - clear focal action ## Cover prompt template Create a **playful illustrated children’s picture-book cover** for **[TITLE]**. Focus on **[main character]** and the central visual idea: **[problem / object / setting]**. Mood: **[funny / whimsical / warm / adventurous / bedtime-gentle / slightly strange]**. Show: - strong readable main silhouette - colourful storybook setting - one clear visual problem or magical gimmick - child-friendly expressive style - polished premium picture-book illustration - room for title text - lots of charm, motion, and visual storytelling ## Spread prompt template Create a **whimsical illustrated picture-book scene**. Scene: **[what happens on this spread]** Character focus: **[1–2 main characters]** Mood: **[funny / bright / worried / triumphant / cozy / mysterious]** Visual details: **[props, environment, repeated motifs, silly side details]** Style: polished children’s storybook illustration, expressive, highly readable, colourful, playful, family-safe ## Character reference template Create a **professional children’s picture-book character reference sheet** for **[character name]**. Show: - front view - side view - back view - 4 facial expressions - 2 action poses - 1 prop or accessory callout Style: - whimsical picture-book illustration - strong silhouette - clear readable shapes - child-friendly expressive design - polished and consistent ## Prompt rules for repeated characters When a character appears multiple times: - keep silhouette stable - keep key colours stable - keep props stable - keep emotional range flexible - keep the design simple enough to redraw many times ## Spread-prompt density rule Do not overload the prompt with ten competing events. Each spread should usually focus on: - one main action - one emotional beat - one visual joke or wonder element ## Best visual pacing Try to include a mix of: - wide establishing spreads - close funny character moments - escalating chaos scenes - a quiet emotional spread - a strong final payoff image ## Illustration pack checklist Before finishing a pack, ask: - do the prompts cover the whole story arc? - is the central character clearly readable? - are the images varied? - is there enough visual payoff? - does the ending image feel frame-worthy? ## Practical motto **The story talks. The pictures party.**