Graphic Design Prompt
Generator.
Free builder for logos, social posts, posters, banners, and brand systems. Tuned for Flux, Ideogram, Midjourney, and Canva.
Style, colour, typography, format. Four levers that turn generic AI output into on-brand assets.
Describe what you want
3 prompt variations
Click Copy to uselogo design, [describe the design brief], minimalist flat style, monochrome with one accent palette
ASSET: Logo BRIEF: [describe the design brief] STYLE: Minimalist flat COLOUR: Monochrome with one accent QUALITY: crisp edges, balanced composition, professional print-ready finish
# BRAND DESIGN REQUEST [describe the design brief] # DELIVERABLE Logo # VISUAL LANGUAGE Style: Minimalist flat. Colour system: Monochrome with one accent. # PRINCIPLES - Readable at every size the asset will be used. - Works in black and white (will compress and survive on any background). - Avoids generic stock feel. One distinctive choice makes this memorable. # AVOID Cliche iconography for the category. Over-decorated ornamentation. Low contrast combinations that fail at small sizes.
Under the hood
Why design prompts need more structure than art prompts.
Design assets usually include text. Text is the hardest thing for an image model to render. Flux and Ideogram lead. Keep copy short, spell it exactly, and verify every render before shipping.
Consistency across assets requires a reusable style description or a LoRA. Generating one mark in isolation is easy. Making twenty assets all feel like the same brand is the real work.
AI produces the concept. Final execution still happens in Figma, Illustrator, or Canva. Treat AI output as the starting point, not the deliverable, and the quality ceiling climbs sharply.
Related free tools
Specialized generators for specific tasks.
FAQ
Questions about graphic design prompting.
Can AI image models really do graphic design?+
For exploration and iteration, yes. Flux and Ideogram render typography cleanly enough to produce usable social posts, posters, and logo concepts. Midjourney is excellent for mood and style but its text rendering is weaker. For final production work you still finish in Figma, Illustrator, or Canva. AI is the fastest idea-generator ever built, not yet the final-execution tool.
Which model handles text best?+
Flux.1 leads on typography accuracy, followed closely by Ideogram. DALLE 3 is decent. Midjourney v7 improved significantly but still fumbles longer strings. For anything with more than a dozen characters of copy, use Flux or Ideogram. Keep the text short and spell it exactly as you want it rendered.
What are the three variants for?+
Short tag string is for fast iteration: you test a dozen versions quickly. Structured brief adds format rules and text requirements, best when you know roughly what you want. Full brand design brief is for hero pieces where you want the model to understand visual principles, not just apply a style. Start short, go full when narrowing in.
How do I get consistent brand identity across multiple assets?+
Generate the primary mark first (logo or hero). Describe its specific style, colour values, and typography. Reuse that exact description as a prefix on every subsequent asset prompt. For Midjourney, the --sref (style reference) flag locks stylistic consistency across prompts. For Flux and SDXL, LoRA training on the brand produces the tightest consistency.
Should I use Canva Magic Design or a raw image model?+
Canva Magic Design is faster for straightforward social posts and emails. Raw Midjourney, Flux, or Ideogram give you wilder visual range but require more editing to ship. Rule of thumb: if the deliverable needs to fit an existing brand system, use Canva. If you are exploring a new visual direction, use a raw image model.
Can it do a complete logo I can use commercially?+
Yes for concept exploration, rarely for final use without vectorising. AI-generated logos are raster images. You vectorise them in Illustrator or with a service like Vectorizer.ai to get scalable final files. Commercial usage rights depend on the model's ToS. Paid plans on Midjourney, Flux, and DALLE all grant commercial rights.
What style trends are dominating in 2026?+
Brutalist editorial layouts, Y2K chrome and glass, Swiss typographic revival, and soft pastel gradients with grain texture continue their run from 2025. Geometric abstract with bold colour blocking is gaining ground. Skeuomorphism is back in limited doses. Flat design never died but is less dominant. Check the competition before going trendy: many brands look identical right now.
How do I handle dimensions for social vs print?+
For Midjourney, use --ar flags: 1:1 for Instagram square, 9:16 for stories, 16:9 for banners, 4:5 for LinkedIn. For SDXL, set the width and height explicitly. For print, always specify vector output intent or generate at 4x the final pixel dimensions so you can downscale for resolution. Never upscale AI output for print, always downscale from a large generation.