Concept: do this for Einstein and a competitor of his
Invention = [User Choice, e.g., Electricity, The Airplane, The Telephone]
Phase 1: Historical Conflict Analysis
1. Lighting: Theatrical Macro Lighting. They are positioned at their own tiny wooden desks or workstations on top of the paper. Texture: Dust motes, scratched mahogany wood, paper grain, metallic reflections. Giant tools (calipers, screwdrivers) casting long shadows. The paper is wrinkled and covered in scribbled corrections. Rules:
The Stage: A large, yellowed Patent Diagram or Blueprint lies flat on a wooden desk. Identify Rivals: Determine the two main historical figures associated including this invention (e.g., Tesla v
Mini tweaks to make this prompt fit YOUR brand or story:
①Try the same composition at three aspect ratios (1:1, 4:5, 16:9) to see which framing tells the story best.
②Swap the main subject for your own product, character or brand identity while keeping the lighting + style intact.
③Switch the lighting (golden hour ↔ studio softbox ↔ blue hour ↔ neon night) to dramatically change the mood.
④Add a single style modifier at the end — e.g. 'shot on 85mm', 'film grain', 'editorial Vogue style', 'cinematic anamorphic'.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which AI model produces the best result for this prompt?
All four major models (Nano Banana 2, GPT Image 2, Midjourney v7, Flux 2) can render this prompt well. Nano Banana 2 excels at character consistency and text. GPT Image 2 is strongest at multi-element scenes with text. Midjourney has the most painterly artistic style. Flux 2 is the best open-source option.
Can I use this prompt for commercial work?
Yes — every prompt on AI Image Free is free for commercial use. The reference image is AI-generated and serves as visual inspiration. The actual image you generate using this prompt is owned by you (subject to your chosen AI model's terms of service).
How do I customize this prompt for my own brand?
Look for bracketed placeholders like [SUBJECT], [COLOR], [BRAND]. Replace those with your specifics. You can also append your own style descriptors at the end (e.g. 'in our brand colors #FF6B35 and #2D3142') for a branded version.