Home/UI & Social Screens/概念字体海报 Prompt

UI & Social Screens

概念字体海报 Prompt

概念字体海报 Prompt is a reusable UI & Social Screens example from @dotey](https://x.com/dotey/status/2048793351290327381) / [Credit @xiaoxiaodong01, including the full prompt, source link, and output media.

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 ui & social screens benchmark when you need a fast style baseline before rewriting your own prompt.
  • It is especially helpful if your target overlaps with Portrait, Fashion, Poster 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 Portrait, Fashion, Poster, so those should usually stay in your first rewrite.
  • The important layer is usually interface density, card hierarchy, and how the screen tells the story before you read small text.
  • 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 Portrait, Fashion, Poster, 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 Portrait, Fashion, Poster but switch the subject matter?
  • Which part of the result comes from section-level structure (UI & Social Screens) 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 ONE finished premium conceptual typography poster for the exact title: “[INPUT_TEXT]” Single poster only. No moodboard, grid, presentation board, mockup, captions, prompt text, process sheet, or sample labels. The title “[INPUT_TEXT]” must be the dominant visual structure of the poster: huge, readable, powerful, and spelled exactly. Do not translate, shorten, replace, or misspell it. Do not add other large readable text. Optional micro catalog text is allowed only if it stays subtle and secondary. Silently interpret the title’s meaning, mood, cultural aura, symbolic associations, psychological tension, and visual rhythm. Turn that interpretation into one strong visual metaphor. Typography is the hero. Design custom-looking letterforms whose weight, width, contrast, spacing, rhythm, distortion, negative space, edge quality, and ink texture express the temperament of the title. The type should feel intentionally designed, not like a default font. If “[INPUT_TEXT]” refers to a widely known person, make a large editorial portrait or full / half-body figure a major visual presence, occupying roughly 40–70% of the composition. The figure should feel recognizable through aura, posture, styling, era, expression, lighting, and symbolic atmosphere, but should not copy a specific existing photograph, official poster, campaign image, logo, slogan, or copyrighted composition. The portrait must interact with the typography: overlapping the letters, emerging from them, being framed by them, casting shadows on them, breaking through them, or being partially hidden behind them. For all other titles, use a human figure, landscape, object, or atmospheric setting only when it strengthens the meaning. It must interact with the typography and deepen the concept, not decorate it. Use a rich but restrained 4–6 color system matched to the theme: dominant background color, primary typography color, figure / landscape tone, emotional accent color, muted support color, and subtle paper / ink texture tone. Avoid flat black-white-red defaults unless conceptually necessary. Composition style: high-end editorial poster, museum-quality graphic design, dramatic scale, strong hierarchy, few elements, intelligent whitespace, bold flat color areas, sharp cropping, silkscreen / lithograph / risograph grain, paper fibers, subtle ink imperfections, refined visual tension. The final image should feel like a complete visual sentence: the title, the figure or setting, the color, and the typography explain each other. Avoid generic word art, glossy 3D lettering, random icons, stock-photo realism, cluttered collage, excessive grunge, tourist clichés, official logos, copied slogans, copied campaign aesthetics, unrelated text, and misspelled typography. ----- INPUT_TEXT:Phoenix Rebirth

Related Cases