Case Media

Case Notes
This page keeps the media, full prompt, and original source together so you can inspect the result first and decide whether the prompt is worth copying, saving, or comparing.
Case Insights
To make this page easier to search, cite, and reuse later, the case is also broken down into practical guidance about usage, visual cues, and prompt structure.
Best Fit Scenarios
- Use this as a model & community benchmark when you need a fast style baseline before rewriting your own prompt.
- It is especially helpful if your target overlaps with UI, City Visual, Minimal and you want to judge the image result before tuning wording.
- Keep it as a control sample when you compare nearby prompt variants one variable at a time.
Visual Signals To Notice
- The clearest style signals here are UI, City Visual, Minimal, so those should usually stay in your first rewrite.
- This kind of case is strongest when you watch deltas: what changed, what broke, and which prompt choice caused that shift.
- This case keeps one primary output, so the first image should be treated as the main visual reference.
How The Prompt Is Structured
- The prompt reads as a long, highly specified prompt, which is useful when you want to judge how much specificity this direction needs.
- Its keyword cluster is centered on UI, City Visual, Minimal, so you can usually keep that cluster while swapping subject, camera, layout, or copy details.
- A practical rewrite path is: keep the outcome, keep the strongest style cues, then replace only the subject and environment blocks.
Good Follow-up Questions
- What changes first if you keep UI, City Visual, Minimal but switch the subject matter?
- Which part of the result comes from section-level structure (Model & Community) versus tag-level style cues?
- Which related cases in the same section give you a cleaner or more extreme variation of the same direction?
Full Prompt
Create a polished Nature / Cell style biomedical research figure, landscape 3:2 (1536×1024), soft minimal palette, publication-ready. Figure title: "Single-cell immune atlas reveals treatment-response states". Layout: 4-panel figure labeled A–D. A. Large UMAP scatter plot with 8 softly colored immune clusters; labels: "CD8 T", "CD4 T", "B cells", "NK", "Mono", "DC", "Treg", "Plasma". Use pastel teal, sage, lavender, peach, slate, amber. B. Dot plot of marker genes with rows "GZMB", "IFNG", "CXCL13", "MS4A1", "LYZ", "FOXP3" and columns matching immune clusters; dot size = fraction, color = expression. C. Small stacked bar chart comparing "Responder" vs "Non-responder" cell-state proportions, with 5 muted segments and a tidy legend. D. Pseudotime trajectory diagram: a clean branching curve from "naive" to "effector" and "exhausted", with small arrows and gradient color. Style requirements: literature-science design, white background, thin gray axes, compact legends, readable micro-labels, restrained typography, soft colors, elegant spacing, no 3D, no glossy UI, no fake journal logo, no watermark.



