grok-image-prompt-optimizer
v1.0.0Optimize text-to-image prompts for Grok and similar image models. Use when the user wants better image generation prompts, poster prompts, competition-grade visual concepts, safer negative prompts, or wants rough ideas rewritten into strong production-ready image prompts. Especially useful for aviat...
Installation
Grok Image Prompt Optimizer
Use this skill when the user wants a prompt rewritten so image quality, composition, and thematic accuracy improve.
Goal
Turn vague or overstuffed requests into prompts that are: - visually focused - easy for Grok to parse - poster-friendly - print-friendly - less likely to produce clutter, cheap ad style, or incorrect details
Core workflow
- Extract the brief into 8 fields:
- subject
- action
- setting
- required safety/detail elements
- mood/value signal
- style
- composition
- output constraints
- Reduce the scene to one main visual idea. If the brief contains too many ideas, choose one hero scene and move the rest into supporting details.
- Rewrite into a structured prompt instead of a rambling paragraph.
- Add a matching negative prompt.
- If the use case is a poster, explicitly require:
- vertical layout unless told otherwise
- strong focal point
- clean background
- reserved negative space for title/text
- print-ready detail
- If the brief involves regulated or technical domains, prioritize plausibility over spectacle.
Prompt structure
Default structure:
[subject], [action], [setting], [key required elements], [mood / value], [visual style], [composition], [lighting / palette], [output format]
For Grok, prefer 1 clean prompt over multiple conflicting clauses.
Default output format
When optimizing a prompt, output:
- Main prompt (CN)
- Main prompt (EN)
- Negative prompt
- Quick tweak knobs
- more official
- more creative
- warmer
- stronger poster feeling
Grok-specific heuristics
- Prefer clear nouns and visible actions over abstract slogans.
- Keep 1–3 human subjects unless the user explicitly wants a crowd.
- If the image is for a poster, say "poster composition", "clear focal point", "negative space for headline", "vertical A3".
- If the image should feel official, use words like:
- professional
- trustworthy
- orderly
- clean
- premium
- realistic illustration
- Avoid asking for too many safety devices in equal visual weight. Choose one primary action and let the rest support it.
- If the user says results feel generic, strengthen:
- camera angle
- lighting
- focal hierarchy
- signature scene detail
- emotional tone
- If the model keeps making commercial-ad images, add:
- public service poster
- official campaign visual
- not commercial advertising
- restrained design
- If the model keeps making messy scenes, add:
- minimal clutter
- clean cabin background
- strong central composition
- limited supporting elements
Technical-domain guardrails
For aviation, transport, healthcare, industrial safety, or emergency imagery: - keep actions believable - keep equipment recognizable - avoid sci-fi styling unless requested - avoid disaster-movie panic unless requested - avoid sexualized uniforms or fashion-shoot styling - avoid impossible cabin layouts
Aviation / cabin-safety pattern
When the brief is about cabin safety posters, use this recipe:
Chinese civil aviation cabin safety poster,
[1 main crew subject or 1 small crew group],
[one concrete safety action],
inside a clean modern aircraft cabin,
[1-3 supporting safety elements],
conveying professionalism, responsibility, warmth, and trust,
realistic illustration, premium official campaign poster,
clean blue-white palette with restrained safety-orange accents,
vertical A3 composition, clear focal point, reserved negative space for Chinese headline and copy, print-ready detail
Good primary actions: - demonstrating seat belt use - guiding passengers to stow baggage correctly - pre-departure cabin safety briefing - calm emergency procedure demonstration - assisting compliant passengers during safety preparation
Avoid combining all of these equally in one frame.
Contest-poster rules
If the user is entering a contest, bias toward: - one memorable hero shot - strong symbolic clarity - emotionally legible values - less stock-photo feeling - less corporate ad feeling - more designed poster feeling
Useful style phrases: - competition-grade poster - public service campaign visual - premium realistic illustration - editorial poster design - cinematic but restrained lighting
Negative prompt starter
Adapt as needed:
low resolution, blurry, distorted hands, extra fingers, deformed face, messy composition, cluttered background, incorrect equipment details, incorrect cabin layout, cheap commercial advertising style, overdone sci-fi, anime style, childish cartoon style, garish colors, random text, watermark, logo errors
Tuning patterns
If result is too plain
Add: - dramatic but restrained lighting - stronger visual hierarchy - competition-grade poster design - more iconic hero composition
If result is too busy
Add: - simplified background - only one main action - minimal clutter - fewer secondary subjects
If result is too much like a photo
Add: - premium realistic illustration - poster design quality - editorial composition
If result is too much like an ad
Add: - public service campaign poster - official safety communication visual - restrained, serious, trustworthy tone
Response style
Be decisive. Do not dump theory unless asked.
When the user provides a brief, produce polished prompts immediately.
Optional reference
If the task is specifically about aviation safety or official poster work, also read:
- references/aviation-poster-patterns.md