Example Showcase
Reference recipe
Provide the exact facts, sections, labels, and numbers you want shown. Ask the model to use placeholders when facts are missing rather than inventing data. Keep copy short because dense text lowers image quality.
Expected image direction
Good for turning notes or papers into shareable visuals.
Example result using our π Infographic preset.
Research summary card
Good for turning notes or papers into shareable visuals.
Create a vertical research summary infographic card, title at top, four structured sections, small icon per section, clean editorial typography, navy and ivory palette, only use provided facts, use short placeholders where details are missing.
Product update infographic
Useful for launch posts and changelog visuals.
Create a product update infographic, modern SaaS style, headline, three new feature cards, one before-after mini diagram, concise captions, clean grid, blue-green accent color, readable text, no invented metrics.
Comparison visual
Use for alternative pages, tool comparisons, or buyer education.
Create a clean comparison infographic, two-column layout, short pros and cons blocks, neutral business design, simple icons, clear visual hierarchy, compact text, enough empty space for readability.
Scenario Prompt
Scenario
GPT Image 2 is unusually useful for information-rich visuals. This scenario turns structured notes, product updates, research summaries, or business ideas into clean infographic cards and explainer images.
This image scenario page is ready to use: start with the prompt preset, upload an optional reference image, and generate a GPT Image 2 result from the live workflow.
Users searching for an AI infographic generator or AI image generator for infographics want a readable visual summary, not just decorative art. They need hierarchy, text blocks, icons, and a layout that can be used in a post, presentation, article, or landing page.
Provide the exact facts, sections, labels, and numbers you want shown. Ask the model to use placeholders when facts are missing rather than inventing data. Keep copy short because dense text lowers image quality.
Yes, but the prompt must be structured. Provide exact sections, labels, and facts, and keep the visible text short.
Tell the model to only use provided facts and to use short placeholders when details are missing. Always review visible text and numbers before publishing.
Vertical cards, timelines, comparison tables, research summary posters, and product update grids work well because they have clear hierarchy and limited text.
Yes. Use the final image as a source frame in image-to-video if you want a subtle camera push-in, reveal, or explainer-style motion.