Advanced Features
Master composition filters, custom tags, and expert options
Advanced Features
Take full control of image generation with composition filters, custom tags, and advanced options for fine-tuned results.
Composition Filters
Control how elements are arranged and how the scene is framed. Select multiple filters for combined effects.
Camera & Framing
- Overhead Shot: Top-down, bird's eye view. Best for flat lay, food photography, product arrangements.
- Close-Up: Tight framing on subject. Best for product details, portraits, texture emphasis.
- Wide Angle: Broad, expansive view. Best for landscapes, architectural shots, group photos.
- Centered: Subject in center of frame. Best for symmetrical designs, formal compositions, product photography.
Subject Placement
- People in Front: People as main focus in foreground. Best for team photos, testimonials, human-centered content.
- People in Back: People in background for context. Best for product focus with context, environmental scenes.
Background Style
- Empty Background: Clean, minimal background. Best for product photography, professional content, focus-driven imagery.
- Busy Background: Detailed, complex background. Best for contextual imagery, storytelling scenes, lifestyle content.
Using Multiple Filters
Combine 2-4 filters for complex compositions:
Professional Product: Empty Background + Close-Up + Centered
Lifestyle Scene: People in Front + Busy Background + Wide Angle
Food Photography: Overhead Shot + Empty Background
Avoid conflicting filters (e.g., "close-up" + "wide angle"). Use 2-4 filters for best results.
Custom Tags
Add specific keywords to guide the AI beyond preset options.
How to Add:
- Type keyword in "Custom Tags/Filters" field
- Press Enter or click "Add"
- Tag appears as removable badge
- Add more or click X to remove
Useful Custom Tags
Lighting:
- "golden hour lighting"
- "studio lighting"
- "soft diffused light"
- "dramatic shadows"
Mood:
- "energetic and dynamic"
- "calm and peaceful"
- "professional and serious"
Technical:
- "shallow depth of field"
- "bokeh effect"
- "high contrast"
- "motion blur"
Style Details:
- "vintage film grain"
- "glossy and polished"
- "matte finish"
When to Use:
- Need specific lighting not covered by themes
- Want particular technical effects
- Aiming for very specific mood
- Standard options don't capture your vision
Be specific, avoid redundancy with your prompt, use photography terms, and test incrementally.
Negative Prompt
Describe what you don't want in the image. The AI actively avoids these elements.
Common Examples:
Ensuring Quality:
blurry, low quality, pixelated, distorted
Avoiding Text:
text, watermark, signature, logo
Maintaining Realism:
cartoon, illustration, unrealistic
Avoiding People:
people, faces, person, human
How to Use:
- Open "Advanced Options" section
- Enter what to avoid in "Negative Prompt" field
- AI avoids those elements during generation
Use sparingly. Too restrictive negative prompts can limit creativity. Start simple and add specifics only if needed.
Combining All Features
For maximum control, layer your settings:
Professional Product Launch:
- Prompt: "Sleek smartphone on modern desk, professional and elegant"
- Style: Realistic
- Theme: Muted
- Dimensions: Square (1:1)
- Composition: Empty Background + Close-Up + Centered
- Custom Tags: "studio lighting", "soft shadows", "glossy finish"
- Negative Prompt: "blurry, cluttered, busy background"
Engaging Social Post:
- Prompt: "Team celebrating milestone, joyful and energetic"
- Style: Artistic
- Theme: Vibrant
- Dimensions: Square (1:1)
- Composition: People in Front + Busy Background
- Custom Tags: "natural lighting", "candid moment"
- Negative Prompt: "blurry, staged, artificial"
Advanced Tips
- Layer control: Start with style/theme, add composition filters, fine-tune with custom tags
- Test incrementally: Add one feature at a time
- Document success: Keep notes on effective combinations
- Balance detail: Too many filters/tags can confuse the AI
- Use negative prompts wisely: Powerful but can restrict creativity