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Social prompts

Awesome GPT Image 2 Prompts for Social

This is the social category inside our awesome GPT Image 2 prompts hub. It focuses on examples, prompt structure, recommended aspect ratios, and the kind of writing that works best for this visual task.

What makes social prompts different from standard image prompts?

Social prompts need to care about more than the subject. They often depend on vertical framing, interface spacing, headline-safe areas, and an instant first impression. That makes composition and negative space much more important.

Inside this category, the most useful prompts usually answer three questions at once: what the main visual subject is, what the viewer should notice first, and what the image is ultimately meant to support. When those three layers are clear, social results in GPT Image 2 tend to become much more stable and much easier to refine.

How to adapt social prompts for different channels

Keep the core visual idea, then adapt the channel language: vertical for short video covers, square for feed posts, wider frames for campaign headers. The best workflow is to keep one prompt skeleton and swap the platform cues.

If you are working in a team, the cleanest workflow is to choose the example closest to your target, send it into the generator, and then change one variable at a time. That gives you a clearer way to discuss whether subject choice, light treatment, aspect ratio, or tone is moving the result in the right direction.

Examples

Social prompts you can test right away

1 examples
TikTok live stream portrait - Generate a screenshot of a TikTok live stream featuring a beautiful woman streaming.
Social
9:16

TikTok live stream portrait

A social-first prompt built for vertical framing, on-screen UI elements, and creator-style composition.

Prompt

Generate a screenshot of a TikTok live stream featuring a beautiful woman streaming.

Best use cases for social prompts

Perfect for cover art, creator posters, product drops, mobile-first campaigns, and visual mockups that need to feel native to social apps instead of looking like generic ads.

If you are still unsure whether to pursue this direction, ask two simple questions: is this style closer to the channel or campaign you are building for, and does it leave enough space for later layout and brand information? If the answer is yes, this category is usually worth testing first.

Take these social prompts into the generator

Start from the example closest to your goal, then refine it around your own brand, subject, and channel. That is usually more efficient than writing from a blank box.