Writing Better Prompts

In BLNG, your prompt is your main tool for shaping the image you want. The more clearly you describe your idea, the better the output will match your expectations.

Your prompt doesn’t work alone — it interacts with your canvas and the influence slider. The system takes your drawing and combines it with your prompt to generate the final result.

  • If your influence is low, the prompt will take the lead and the system will follow your description more freely.
  • If your influence is high, the drawing becomes more important — the prompt will help refine or add detail to what’s already there.
Tip

Pro-Tip

Think of the prompt as a collaborator to your sketch: it helps guide the material, structure, and intention behind your drawing.

✅ Do

  1. Be specific “A thick gold ring with an oval ruby” works much better than “a beautiful ring.”
  2. Mention materials Use terms like silver, onyx, ceramic, leather, enamel — this helps guide the form and texture.
  3. Describe structure or shape Words like open band, twisted, multi-stone, engraved give the system more clarity.
  4. Include key elements If there’s something essential — like “a single central diamond” or “adjustable clasp” — add it.
  5. Test variations Prompting is iterative. Try different angles or reword your prompt to explore creative directions.

❌ Don’t

  1. Don’t be too vague
    A prompt like “a cool piece” is too abstract and won’t give you predictable results.
  2. Don’t stack too many ideas
    Keep it focused: “a geometric ring with three stones” is better than mixing too many features at once.
  3. Don’t skip the core object
    Always name what you want: ring, necklace, bracelet, etc.
  4. Don’t contradict yourself
    Avoid opposites like “ultra minimalist with lots of detail.”
  5. Don’t expect one prompt to solve everything
    Use the first result as a base and iterate from there — small changes can lead to big improvements.