A copy-ready radar for high-signal AI prompts across image, video, webpage, and workflow use cases. Each prompt is rewritten as an original reusable template with source attribution, controls, quality checks, and failure modes.
Updated 2026-05-02
Hot prompts are useful only when they become reusable patterns.
This page tracks public creator and prompt-library signals, then converts them into practical templates that can be copied, modified, evaluated, and connected to deeper AI workflow pages.
12copyable prompts
4media classes
dailyupdate target
Not a scrape dump
Prompts are rewritten as original templates with attribution and operating notes instead of reposting creator text verbatim.
Built for search
Every card targets a concrete query: floor plan render prompts, video storyboards, text rendering tests, product commercials, and model bakeoffs.
Built for reuse
Each prompt includes variables, quality checks, and failure modes so the page is useful beyond a one-time copy action.
The low-skill redraw format is spreading because it gives image models a clear anti-polish target: rough lines, clumsy fills, visible mistakes, and intentionally awkward composition.
Use case: Meme assets, social posts, creator experiments, prompt stress tests, and brand-safe joke visuals where charm comes from controlled imperfection.
Redraw the provided reference image as if it were recreated quickly in an old version of Microsoft Paint by someone with very limited drawing skill.
Keep the main subject, pose, rough composition, and recognizable objects from the reference, but convert everything into intentionally awkward low-resolution digital drawing.
Style rules:
- use shaky mouse-drawn outlines
- use flat bucket-fill colors with small unfilled gaps
- make the proportions a little wrong but still recognizable
- preserve the main colors and object positions from the reference
- add a few clumsy details that look hand-drawn, not AI-polished
- avoid realistic lighting, perfect gradients, cinematic rendering, or professional illustration
Output goal:
A funny, deliberately bad MS Paint-style redraw that feels human, rough, and oddly charming rather than broken or abstract.
Floor-plan conversion prompts are commercially useful because they turn a flat layout into a sales-ready visualization without needing a full 3D modeling workflow.
Use case: Real estate listings, renovation concepts, interior planning, property marketing, and early client visualization.
Convert the provided 2D floor plan into a clean 3D isometric real estate render.
Preserve the room layout, wall positions, door openings, windows, and approximate proportions from the source plan. Do not invent extra rooms or remove structural boundaries.
Rendering direction:
- show the apartment or house from a slightly elevated isometric angle
- use realistic but neutral materials: light wood floors, white or warm walls, simple cabinetry, clean bathroom surfaces
- add furniture only where it clarifies room function
- keep the design staged but not overcrowded
- make circulation paths readable
- use soft daylight and realistic shadows
- keep labels out of the image unless explicitly requested
If a room purpose is unclear, infer conservatively from size and position, and keep the furniture minimal.
Output goal:
A polished 3D real estate concept render that remains faithful to the original 2D floor plan.
Use case: Concept boards, campaign ideation, fashion moodboards, product collaborations, and creative direction.
Design a fashion look inspired by the provided product or object reference.
Translate the reference into clothing design, not a costume copy. Preserve the strongest visual cues: color palette, material texture, silhouette logic, pattern rhythm, hardware details, and brand mood.
Output direction:
- create one full-body editorial fashion look on a model
- make the inspiration visible but not literal
- include fabric choices and surface details that echo the reference
- keep the styling coherent from head to toe
- use a clean runway, studio, or campaign-photo setting
- avoid logos unless the reference explicitly requires brand marks
- avoid turning the product into a prop glued onto clothing
Reference interpretation:
{{describe_product_shape_material_palette_and_mood}}
Output goal:
A credible fashion concept that a designer could use as a moodboard direction, with clear lineage from the original product reference.
Use case: Editorial portraits, local business visuals, social realism scenes, brand storytelling, and street-photography prompt tests.
Create a candid documentary-style photo of a convenience store cashier during a quiet late-night shift.
Scene requirements:
- the cashier stands behind the counter in a small convenience store
- shelves, packaged snacks, receipt printer, scanner, counter clutter, and drink coolers should feel specific and lived-in
- lighting comes from fluorescent ceiling panels, cooler glow, and small practical lights
- the subject should look natural, not posed like a model
- preserve imperfect real-world details: reflections, plastic packaging, small signs, worn counter edges
- use a 35mm or 50mm documentary photo feel
- keep the image respectful and grounded
Mood:
Quiet, ordinary, slightly cinematic, with enough environmental detail that the store feels real.
Avoid:
Overly glamorous styling, fake neon overload, extra fingers, illegible brand clutter, and artificial film grain that hides bad details.
Use case: Design education, social posts, typography explainers, font comparison visuals, and prompt-based layout tests.
Create a clean Japanese typography infographic comparing several font styles in a polished editorial layout.
Content structure:
- headline area with a short Japanese title
- 4 to 6 font sample panels
- each panel should show a font mood label, a short sample phrase, and one practical use case
- include small notes about readability, warmth, formality, and display suitability
- use a restrained grid with generous spacing
- make the design feel like a professional design reference card
Visual direction:
- modern Japanese editorial design
- soft neutral background
- precise alignment
- clear hierarchy
- accent color used sparingly
Quality rules:
- keep all text short and legible
- avoid filling the poster with fake paragraphs
- do not invent actual font licensing claims
- if exact font names are uncertain, label them as style categories instead of factual font recommendations
Use case: Creator reels, fitness brand concepts, short-form video storyboards, and lifestyle campaign ideation.
Create a short vertical GRWM gym video sequence with six clear shots.
Format:
- vertical 9:16
- fast but readable pacing
- handheld creator-style camera language
- realistic transitions, not overproduced VFX
Shot list:
1. morning bag-prep close-up: shoes, towel, water bottle, headphones
2. outfit mirror check with natural room light
3. quick macro shot of tying shoes or adjusting watch
4. transition leaving home or entering the gym
5. one focused workout moment with controlled motion
6. final post-workout confidence shot with calm breathing
Style:
Clean fitness creator content, natural skin texture, believable gym lighting, grounded motion, no impossible camera movement.
Avoid:
Floating equipment, warped hands, unreadable brand text, extreme beauty filter, and chaotic cuts that hide the sequence.
Use case: Product advertising concepts, ecommerce hero videos, agency moodboards, and brand campaign testing.
Create a cinematic luxury perfume commercial for a single perfume bottle.
Video structure:
1. macro opening on glass edge and cap texture
2. slow reveal of the bottle on a reflective surface
3. controlled mist, fabric, water ripple, or flower petal movement
4. hero shot with brand-like lighting but no invented logo
5. final packshot with elegant negative space
Visual direction:
- premium studio lighting
- shallow depth of field
- precise reflections
- restrained color palette
- slow camera movement
- tactile material details: glass, metal, liquid, paper box, fabric
Rules:
- keep the product shape consistent across shots
- do not add unreadable fake brand text
- do not overwhelm the bottle with effects
- make the commercial feel expensive through restraint, not visual noise
Use case: Sports edits, campaign concepts, team announcements, athlete videos, and motion-prompt benchmarking.
Create a cinematic soccer short video storyboard with five shots.
Shot sequence:
1. low-angle close-up of boots stepping onto wet grass under stadium lights
2. medium shot of the player controlling the ball while the crowd blurs in the background
3. tracking shot as the player accelerates past a defender
4. slow-motion strike moment with turf particles and focused body mechanics
5. reaction shot: net movement, teammates turning, stadium light flare, controlled celebration
Camera and mood:
- dramatic but realistic sports broadcast language
- believable body motion
- sharp lighting contrast
- rain or mist only if it supports the scene
- keep jerseys and signage generic unless real branding is provided
Avoid:
Impossible leg motion, duplicate balls, warped nets, fake team logos, and overcut action that hides continuity errors.
Use case: Wellness creator content, studio marketing, video-model motion tests, and calm lifestyle campaigns.
Create a calm handheld vertical video of a short yoga vinyasa flow.
Sequence:
1. seated breath moment on the mat
2. slow transition into tabletop
3. controlled downward dog
4. step forward into low lunge
5. gentle rise into warrior pose
6. final relaxed standing breath
Visual direction:
- warm natural light
- quiet studio or home environment
- stable handheld camera with subtle human movement
- realistic body alignment and transitions
- soft fabric texture and mat detail
- no extreme flexibility unless explicitly requested
Rules:
- keep limbs anatomically plausible
- preserve continuity of mat position and room layout
- make the pacing calm enough to follow
- avoid jump cuts that hide broken transitions
Webpage-generation prompts are durable because users want the prompt to produce a usable layout, copy hierarchy, and conversion path, not just a visual mockup.
Use case: Landing page concepts, SaaS positioning pages, product launches, internal prototypes, and marketing experiments.
Create a single-page product landing page from the brief below.
Product brief:
{{product_name}}
{{target_user}}
{{main_problem}}
{{primary_outcome}}
{{proof_points}}
{{pricing_or_cta_context}}
Page requirements:
- clear hero section with one primary promise and one CTA
- problem section that names the buyer pain directly
- product workflow or feature section with 3 to 5 concrete capabilities
- proof section with credible evidence placeholders, not fake logos
- use-case section for the top buyer scenario
- FAQ section that handles objections
- final CTA
Design direction:
- modern but not generic
- strong typographic hierarchy
- responsive layout
- accessible contrast
- no fake customer logos, fabricated metrics, or unsupported claims
Output:
Return the complete page copy, section structure, and visual direction. If generating code, keep it semantic and responsive.
Use case: Model comparisons, packaging tests, poster prompts, UI screenshot prompts, and image-generation QA.
Create a text-rendering stress-test board for an image generation model.
Use exactly this target text:
{{target_text}}
Create four panels:
1. large poster headline
2. small product label
3. curved sticker text
4. UI button or app card
Rules:
- keep the target text short
- render the same exact text in every panel
- label each panel clearly
- use a clean comparison-board layout
- avoid adding unrelated words
- make spelling accuracy more important than decorative complexity
Output goal:
A clear board that shows whether the model can preserve exact text across multiple realistic design contexts.
Use case: Model selection, creator tests, benchmark posts, prompt tuning, and visual QA reviews.
Create a model bakeoff comparison board for the same creative task across multiple AI systems.
Comparison setup:
- task: {{creative_task}}
- models or versions: {{model_names}}
- shared prompt constants: {{shared_prompt}}
- variable under test: {{what_changes_between_models}}
- success criteria: {{evaluation_criteria}}
Board requirements:
- one panel per model
- identical labels and panel sizes
- same subject, prompt, seed/reference conditions where possible
- a short notes area for strengths and failures
- no winner badge unless evaluation evidence is included
Evaluation axes:
- prompt adherence
- visual quality
- text accuracy if applicable
- identity or reference preservation if applicable
- composition and layout
- artifacts or failure modes
Output goal:
A comparison artifact that makes the tradeoffs visible instead of turning the test into a vague popularity contest.
Track public prompt-library and creator-community signals where prompts are being copied, remixed, benchmarked, or reused.
Rebuild each prompt as an original operating template with source attribution, variables, quality checks, and failure modes.
Favor patterns that can produce durable search demand: image editing, video storyboards, web generation, model comparisons, and prompt evaluation.
Do not republish creator prompts verbatim. The value is the adapted template, explanation, and reuse boundary.
The practical update workflow is simple: keep the page focused on prompt patterns that can earn durable search traffic, then deepen individual winners into standalone explainers when impressions appear in Search Console.