Brand Visual Prompt Templates for GPT Image 2
Copy practical brand visual prompt templates for GPT Image 2, including identity boards, campaign posters, product launch visuals, and social media brand assets.

Brand visual prompt templates work best when they behave like a reusable art-direction brief. Start with the brand constants, choose the asset type, then ask GPT Image 2 for a specific deliverable: an identity board, product campaign visual, editorial poster, social launch collage, or prompt-library style exploration.
Use the templates below with GPT Image 2 prompts, then generate and revise the strongest version in GPT Image 2. Keep the prompt structure stable and change only the brand variables.
TL;DR: lock the brand before you prompt
The safest brand visual prompt has five stable controls:
- Brand constants: name, category, audience, personality, color system, and materials.
- Asset type: identity board, launch poster, product ad, social collage, packaging concept, or website hero.
- Composition: grid, focal point, negative space, camera angle, and text-safe area.
- Visual language: typography mood, lighting, texture, palette, realism level, and design era.
- Output rule: aspect ratio, no final legal text, no logo distortion, no watermark, and clear room for later typography.
If a brand image fails, do not rewrite the whole prompt. First decide whether the issue is brand identity, composition, product clarity, or text handling.
Template 1: brand identity presentation board
Use this when you need a visual system rather than a single ad. It is useful for moodboards, client reviews, packaging tests, and landing-page art direction.

Create a premium brand identity presentation board for [BRAND NAME], a [CATEGORY] brand for [TARGET AUDIENCE].
Brand constants:
- Personality: [3 adjectives]
- Core palette: [primary color], [secondary color], [accent color]
- Materials and textures: [materials]
- Visual references: [era, design movement, photography style, or packaging style]
Board layout:
- Top left: brand name and short positioning line
- Top right: five color swatches with readable labels
- Center: hero product or packaging concept
- Lower left: typography pairing with headline, subhead, and body samples
- Lower right: three application tiles: website hero, social post, and product label
Style:
- Polished Figma-style presentation board
- Premium spacing, aligned grid, realistic shadows, editorial art direction
- Keep the brand system coherent across every tile
Constraints:
- Use short readable labels only
- Do not create final legal claims or tiny paragraphs
- No distorted logos, no random decorative icons, no watermark
- Make the board suitable for a brand review meeting
The important part is the board structure. GPT Image 2 is much more likely to produce a usable brand system when the prompt asks for palette, typography, packaging, and usage examples in one controlled layout.
Template 2: campaign poster with brand takeover energy
Use this pattern when the brand needs a campaign visual, key visual, city poster, or launch story. It turns a brand brief into a bold composition instead of a generic logo mockup.
Using the brand name "[BRAND NAME]", create a cinematic campaign poster titled "[CAMPAIGN IDEA]".
Campaign goal:
Show how [BRAND NAME] becomes impossible to ignore in [CITY / CULTURE / CATEGORY / SEASON].
Main visual:
- One clear hero subject: [product, mascot, model, packaging, symbol, or environment]
- The brand presence expands through the scene using [signage, packaging, color, light, street posters, product placements, or environmental details]
- The scene should feel like a premium campaign key visual, not a busy collage
Art direction:
- Mood: [premium / playful / rebellious / calm / futuristic / heritage]
- Palette: [brand palette]
- Lighting: [lighting direction]
- Camera and composition: [wide city view / close editorial frame / centered poster layout]
Text-safe areas:
- Reserve clean space for a headline and campaign line
- Do not generate final legal text
- Keep any visible brand name short and readable
Output:
High-detail campaign poster, 4K, sharp focal point, strong hierarchy, no watermark, no extra logos.
This template is best for first-round campaign exploration. Once the composition works, add final typography and brand marks in a design tool.
Template 3: premium editorial brand poster
Use this when the brand belongs to fashion, beauty, food, creator tools, lifestyle, or any category where visual tone matters as much as product detail.

Create a premium editorial poster for [BRAND NAME].
Topic:
[COLLECTION / PRODUCT DROP / BRAND STORY / SEASONAL CAMPAIGN]
Visual direction:
- Oversized editorial composition with a clear central subject
- Minimal futuristic fashion design language
- Strong negative space for future headline placement
- Palette based on [BRAND COLORS]
- Lighting: [soft studio / hard flash / cinematic rim light / natural daylight]
Subject:
[model, product, packaging, object, or scene] should communicate [brand value or emotion].
Typography guidance:
Use only short placeholder text if needed. Do not attempt final small text, legal copy, or complex logo detail.
Constraints:
The image must feel like a premium magazine campaign, not a stock photo. Keep the subject sharp, the background intentional, and the brand mood consistent.
The prompt works because it gives GPT Image 2 both the creative direction and the production boundary: the generated image creates the campaign look, while final type and approvals stay outside the model.
Template 4: social launch collage
Use this when the brand needs fast creative directions for Instagram, TikTok covers, X posts, newsletters, or a launch moodboard.

Create a social launch collage for [BRAND NAME], a [CATEGORY] brand.
Use case:
The visual should work as a launch post, mood teaser, or campaign recap.
Collage structure:
- 5 to 7 image tiles arranged in a clean editorial grid
- Include product detail, lifestyle scene, brand texture, color swatch, and one hero moment
- Keep the overall layout polished and modern, not scrapbook clutter
Brand controls:
- Palette: [brand palette]
- Mood: [brand personality]
- Audience: [target audience]
- Channel: [Instagram carousel / TikTok cover / X launch image / newsletter header]
Constraints:
- No final small text
- No fake UI captions
- Keep the brand mood consistent across all tiles
- Leave one clean area for a headline that will be added later
This template helps when a team has not chosen one final campaign direction yet. It can produce several visual territories quickly while still protecting the brand palette and mood.
Brand prompt decision table
| If the job is... | Use this template | Lock first | Review first |
|---|---|---|---|
| A new identity system | Brand identity presentation board | Palette, typography mood, materials | Does it feel like one coherent system? |
| A launch campaign | Campaign poster | Hero subject, campaign idea, text-safe area | Is the focal point strong enough? |
| A fashion or lifestyle brand | Editorial brand poster | mood, model/product role, negative space | Does it look premium or generic? |
| A social content sprint | Social launch collage | channel, tile count, brand palette | Does every tile belong to the same brand? |
| A product page visual | Product campaign brief | product shape, material, background | Is the product recognizable and useful? |
How to revise the first result
Use this simple order before changing the entire prompt:
- Identity is wrong: add stronger brand constants and a reference image if needed.
- Composition is messy: change aspect ratio, focal point, grid, or negative space.
- Brand feels generic: add audience, category tension, material cues, and palette.
- Text is broken: remove final text from the prompt and reserve a blank area for later typography.
- Product is unclear: describe the product shape, surface, scale, and hero angle before adding style words.
FAQ
What is a brand visual prompt template?
It is a reusable prompt structure that turns a brand brief into a visual asset. The template keeps the brand constants stable while letting you swap the category, campaign idea, product, channel, and aspect ratio.
Should I include a logo in the prompt?
Use the brand name as a short placeholder only when it helps the composition. For final logo accuracy, add the approved logo in a design tool after generation.
Can GPT Image 2 create a full brand identity?
It can explore visual directions, moodboards, posters, and packaging concepts. Treat the output as a strong creative draft, then apply human brand rules, final typography, and legal review.
Which template should I try first?
Start with the identity board if the brand system is unclear. Start with the campaign poster if the brand system already exists and you need a launch visual.
Why not ask for final text inside the generated image?
Generated text can be inconsistent, especially for small labels and legal copy. Reserve headline space in the image, then add final typography manually.
Where should I find more examples?
Browse the GPT Image 2 prompts library for structured examples, then run the closest pattern in GPT Image 2.