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Featured Cases

Browse featured cases and choose whether to fill the prompt only or apply the prompt with model settings.

Photorealistic, casual indoor self-portrait, mid-length half-length shot at eye level, soft bright diffuse frontal natural light casting soft shadows behind the subject, with an overall naturally beautiful, camera-ready, and approachable selfie mood.

Young adult woman with a warm golden-copper sun-kissed complexion and smooth, translucent skin. Thick long blond hair with dark brown roots (balaya day/ombre dye), parted in the middle, fluffy wavy hair hanging down over the shoulders, soft hair framing the face.

Oval face with soft jawline. One eye is open and looking directly into the camera (dark brown or hazel), while the other eye is playfully closed and winking. The upper eyelids have black winged eyeliner and dark mascara, and the brows are defined and softly arched in medium brown. The nose is slender and straight, with subtle highlights and shadows. Cheekbones were chiseled, and the apples of her cheeks were painted with a warm rosy peach blush. The plump, rose-pink glossy lips were pursed in a distinctly kissy "duck face" expression. The overall expression is playful, confident, charming, and especially photogenic.

She wore a figure-hugging light blue and white plaid bustier-style halter top with a sweetheart neckline, structured underwired cup seams, thick tonal straps, and delicate white scalloped lace at the neckline and hem. The lower body is light-washed jeans with a mid-low waist, the metal buttons at the top are unbuttoned, and the waistband is slightly open.

Place your hands lightly on your waist/hips and rest your fingers splayed on your ribs. There are multiple stacked silver rings on her right hand. Long almond shaped acrylic manicure with light pink/nude polish.

Background: modern bright interior room (bedroom). Sleek white walls and light oak floors. An idyllic painting of green fields hangs on the left wall, and a corner of the bed reveals white sheets and a beige/cream textured blanket. To the right is a partially visible dark doorframe or open door, and a woven wicker/rattan floor basket. The ceiling includes a rectangular white HVAC vent and a round white smoke detector or light fixture.

Photorealistic, high-detail, natural interior portrait with a pretty, camera-ready, effortlessly charming subject.
nano-banana-pro-1kImage

prompt: Photorealistic, casual indoor self-portrait, mid-length half-length shot at eye level, soft bright diffuse frontal natural light casting soft shadows behind the subject, with an overall naturally beautiful, camera-ready, and approachable selfie mood. Young adult woman with a warm golden-copper sun-kissed complexion and smooth, translucent skin. Thick long blond hair with dark brown roots (balaya day/ombre dye), parted in the middle, fluffy wavy hair hanging down over the shoulders, soft hair framing the face. Oval face with soft jawline. One eye is open and looking directly into the camera (dark brown or hazel), while the other eye is playfully closed and winking. The upper eyelids have black winged eyeliner and dark mascara, and the brows are defined and softly arched in medium brown. The nose is slender and straight, with subtle highlights and shadows. Cheekbones were chiseled, and the apples of her cheeks were painted with a warm rosy peach blush. The plump, rose-pink glossy lips were pursed in a distinctly kissy "duck face" expression. The overall expression is playful, confident, charming, and especially photogenic. She wore a figure-hugging light blue and white plaid bustier-style halter top with a sweetheart neckline, structured underwired cup seams, thick tonal straps, and delicate white scalloped lace at the neckline and hem. The lower body is light-washed jeans with a mid-low waist, the metal buttons at the top are unbuttoned, and the waistband is slightly open. Place your hands lightly on your waist/hips and rest your fingers splayed on your ribs. There are multiple stacked silver rings on her right hand. Long almond shaped acrylic manicure with light pink/nude polish. Background: modern bright interior room (bedroom). Sleek white walls and light oak floors. An idyllic painting of green fields hangs on the left wall, and a corner of the bed reveals white sheets and a beige/cream textured blanket. To the right is a partially visible dark doorframe or open door, and a woven wicker/rattan floor basket. The ceiling includes a rectangular white HVAC vent and a round white smoke detector or light fixture. Photorealistic, high-detail, natural interior portrait with a pretty, camera-ready, effortlessly charming subject.

100% free on Kovvid AI

Free AI image generator for 4K design with Nano Banana Pro

If you are building banners, PDP headers, promo cards, or brand visuals, Nano Banana Pro is better at establishing headline space, product space, and clean whitespace before you chase polish. You can use it to test layout briefs, revise from reference images, extend one direction across multiple sizes, and check 4K-ready output.

Creator showcase

See how creators use Kovvid AI for product visuals, ad creatives, and short-form videos.

Nano Banana Pro layout recipes

Skip the vague feature talk and try these layout recipes instead

If you are working on commercial design, ads, or ecommerce visuals, these brief patterns are a faster way to see where Nano Banana Pro fits.

Brand homepage / landing page

Homepage banner recipe

Brief
16:9 homepage banner with the logo area reserved at top left, a one-line headline plus one-line subheadline on the left, product visual anchored on the right, a low-density background, and a clear CTA-safe area along the bottom.
Lock First
Headline width, product anchor, CTA-safe area, brand color direction
Iterate Later
Background texture, supporting graphics, glow treatment, product angle
Product detail page

Ecommerce selling-point recipe

Brief
4:5 selling-point visual with the product slightly right of center, three benefit blocks on the left, a clear headline on top, and easy-to-scan information zones under it. Clarity matters more than atmosphere here.
Lock First
Product zone, benefit grouping, headline hierarchy, whitespace
Iterate Later
Icon style, supporting background, color direction, decorative elements
Social card / campaign asset

Promo card recipe

Brief
1:1 promo card with the main offer number or benefit title anchored in the center, short supporting copy above and below, and product or gift elements used only in a supporting role. Text readability has to stay strong.
Lock First
Primary info scale, number anchor, timing or offer placement, text contrast
Iterate Later
Pattern system, seasonal motifs, frame style, background palette
One campaign across channels

Multi-size extension recipe

Brief
Build one repeatable layout system first: headline on the left, product on the right, two to three benefit blocks, then extend it into 16:9 banners, 4:5 posters, and 1:1 social cards without losing the same visual logic.
Lock First
Information order, product anchor, headline zone, brand elements
Iterate Later
Crop behavior, whitespace ratio, secondary decoration, local spacing

Compare 7 AI image and video models in one workspace

Use Kovvid AI to compare Sora 2, Veo 3, Kling AI, Nano Banana 2, Nano Banana Pro, Seedream 4.5, and Seedance 2.0 side by side for image generation, video generation, image-to-video, and frames workflows.

Nano Banana Pro layout criteria

Nano Banana Pro is better at getting the information structure right before chasing pure image mood

Before you worry about mood, check whether the layout reads clearly, whether the headline zone and product zone hold up, which parts should stay locked, and which parts are worth iterating later.

It is strongest when the headline, offer, and product all need to read at once

Nano Banana Pro is a strong fit for banners, posters, promo cards, selling-point graphics, and PDP headers where visual appeal is important but information hierarchy still has to stay clear. It is closer to real marketing design work than a mood-first image model.

It is more useful as a layout-draft tool than as a photoreal hero-shot tool

For campaign headers, brand key visuals, and ad creatives, teams often need to know whether the structure works before they care about final polish. Nano Banana Pro is valuable because it helps you build that skeleton first, not because it should win every realism contest.

It works better with a layout brief than with a dense descriptive prompt

You do not need a perfect prompt on the first try. Start with the use case, aspect ratio, headline zone, product zone, background density, and color direction, then refine spacing, hierarchy, and focal elements step by step.

Reference edits are strongest when you want to keep the structure and change the look

Nano Banana Pro is useful not only for generating from scratch, but also for updating existing design drafts, mockups, and product visuals. In many cases, you do not need to rebuild the whole image. You need to keep the layout, swap the treatment, and adjust the hierarchy.

It is especially useful when one layout needs to stretch across multiple sizes

One campaign often has to become a homepage banner, a vertical poster, a square social card, and a PDP header. Nano Banana Pro is useful because you can establish one clear structure first and then adapt it instead of rebuilding each size from zero.

It fits ecommerce information graphics because hierarchy matters more than atmosphere

Ecommerce teams constantly need feature graphics, comparison cards, offer visuals, and explainer images. Nano Banana Pro is a better fit for that kind of work because the real problem is not cinematic mood. It is whether the message reads fast and in the right order.

Its real leverage is reusable templates, not one-off images

When you find a structure that works, save it. Reusing proven rules for headline placement, product anchoring, benefit blocks, and CTA-safe space makes the next campaign faster and much more consistent.

If the real need is realism and material quality, Seedream 4.5 is often the better first comparison

Nano Banana Pro should not be your first choice for every image task. If the job depends more on materials, lighting, product-photography credibility, or portrait realism than on layout structure, Seedream 4.5 is usually the better model to compare first.

Nano Banana Pro layout brief

A clear layout brief usually works better than a detail-heavy prompt

Start with the use case, aspect ratio, information zones, product anchor, and background density first. Then add detail once the structure is already working.

01
1

Define who the image is for, where it will live, and what it must do

Before you start, decide whether this is a homepage banner, a PDP header, a promo card, a campaign poster, or a social asset. Different placements need different hierarchy, so the job has to be clear before the prompt gets long.

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2

Lay out the skeleton first: headline zone, product zone, benefit blocks, whitespace, and CTA-safe space

Start with where the subject goes, where the headline lives, how benefits are grouped, how dense the background should be, and whether you need reserved space for a button or logo. Nano Banana Pro usually responds better to this kind of structure-first brief.

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3

Lock what should not move, then iterate the parts that can

Once you have a first draft, do not restart too quickly. First check whether the headline zone, product anchor, information order, and safety whitespace are already working. Then change the background style, supporting elements, palette, or local details.

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4

Turn strong structures into reusable templates and multi-size systems

When you land on a structure that works, save the prompt pattern and layout rules. Later, you can swap products, offers, or sizes without rebuilding the whole visual from scratch.

Nano Banana Pro 4-step layout brief

It works best when you use it to build the structure first and polish the details second.

The practical value of Nano Banana Pro

It is useful for more than speed. It helps teams get the structure right early.

If the image needs to survive a real workflow, not just look attractive on its own, Nano Banana Pro becomes much more useful. The value shows up in clarity, editability, template reuse, and multi-size extension.

On Kovvid AI, marketing teams can sketch ad layouts faster, ecommerce teams can test PDP creative earlier, and brand teams can scale one visual direction across more sizes and formats. For most teams, Nano Banana Pro shortens not just the path from idea to first draft, but also the path from one draft to a full asset set.

Start Nano Banana Pro

Multi-use

Built for ads, ecommerce, and brand design

4 steps

Layout-brief workflow

8 points

Model-specific decision signals

Marketing teams can test headlines, offers, and hero composition before design polish

Marketing teams often need to compare selling points, headlines, and layout directions fast. Nano Banana Pro makes it easier to generate several structured options first, then judge which layout is actually doing the better job.

Ecommerce teams can build benefit zones, product anchors, and offer blocks faster

Ecommerce teams deal with constant creative changes. Nano Banana Pro helps you test benefit grouping, product placement, and information hierarchy faster, and those structures are easier to reuse across future campaigns.

Designers can get to the structural draft sooner and spend more time refining

Designers do not use Nano Banana Pro to replace design software. They use it to reach a strong structure sooner, then spend their actual design time on refinement, consistency, and finish.

Lean teams can turn one direction into a full asset family faster

For lean teams, Nano Banana Pro can raise output without adding headcount. Even without a full design team, you can still get a structured first version quickly and extend it into multiple sizes and channels.

Nano Banana Pro FAQ

Questions people ask before deciding whether Nano Banana Pro is the right fit

These are the common questions teams ask when they are trying to decide whether Nano Banana Pro belongs in a real design workflow.

Nano Banana Pro is closer to a layout-first commercial design tool than to a purely mood-first image model. It is useful when you need to establish headline space, product space, hierarchy, and structure before you worry about final polish.
Yes. Many teams use it first as a low-risk way to test layouts, messaging, and creative direction before deciding whether it belongs in their regular workflow.
It works best for ecommerce graphics, campaign headers, banners, social cards, brand key visuals, selling-point graphics, promo cards, and other images where the layout has to carry the message. It is more useful for practical design drafts than for pure mood artwork.
It is a strong option for workflows that need higher-resolution output. If your project depends on detail and stable structure, Nano Banana Pro is worth testing early.
Start with the use case, aspect ratio, subject position, headline zone, benefit grouping, background density, color direction, and whether you need reserved space for a CTA or logo. Structure signals are usually more useful here than vague mood language.
Yes. You can use product shots, mockups, or design drafts as references, then ask it to change the background, shift the hierarchy, replace key elements, or keep the structure while changing the look.
If the real need is material realism, lighting credibility, product-photography finish, or portrait quality rather than layout structure and information hierarchy, Seedream 4.5 is usually the better first comparison.
Because it does more than generate attractive images. It helps teams create visuals that are clear enough to review, practical enough to iterate, structured enough to reuse, and easier to extend into a real asset system.
When you compare layout-oriented image models, pay attention to text handling, layout stability, template reuse, and whether the job actually belongs on Seedream 4.5 instead.
Nano Banana Pro vs Seedream 4.5

Should you start with Nano Banana Pro or Seedream 4.5?

If both models can make ads and product visuals, the more useful question is which problem each one solves first.

Criteria
Nano Banana Pro
Seedream 4.5
Problem it solves first
Build the headline zone, product zone, benefit blocks, and layout skeleton first.
Build material realism, lighting, photoreal persuasion, and image finish first.
Best-fit jobs
Banners, promo cards, PDP headers, selling-point graphics, structured marketing visuals.
Photoreal key visuals, portrait scenes, lifestyle imagery, realistic product advertising.
What to define first
Use case, aspect ratio, headline zone, product anchor, benefit grouping, CTA space.
Subject, material, scene, lighting, camera feel, photoreal style.
How it iterates best
Lock the structure first, then change background, accents, color, and details.
Lock realism first, then adjust material feel, color temperature, background, and framing.
When to stop forcing it
If the real need is photographic realism and material credibility, switch to Seedream 4.5.
If the real blocker is text placement, information hierarchy, and template extension, switch back to Nano Banana Pro.

Short version: start with Nano Banana Pro for layout structure and reusable templates; start with Seedream 4.5 for realism, lighting, and photographic finish.

Free AI Image Generator - Nano Banana Pro for 4K Design | Kovvid