Nano Banana Flash Prompt Guide - Write Prompts That Stay On Brand

A practical prompt framework, templates, and troubleshooting tips for consistent Nano Banana Flash results.
2026/01/15

Nano Banana Flash Prompt Guide: Write Prompts That Stay On Brand

If you are searching for a Nano Banana Flash prompt guide, you likely want two things: images that match your brief and results that stay consistent across a series. Great output is not a mystery. It comes from a prompt that is structured, repeatable, and clear about what matters. This guide gives you a framework, ready to use templates, and a simple troubleshooting playbook so you can get on brand results faster.

Nano Banana Flash makes it easy to generate variations, but the model still follows the instructions you give it. A strong prompt is the difference between a usable campaign set and a folder of random images. Use the sections below as a reference and build your own prompt library as you go.

Why prompt structure matters

A prompt is a set of priorities. When the prompt is vague, the model fills the gaps with its own assumptions. That leads to results that look good in isolation but do not match your brand. A structured prompt defines subject, style, and composition so you can get repeatable results.

Marketing teams often work across ads, landing pages, and social posts. Without a consistent prompt structure, each asset becomes a new experiment. With a structure, each asset is a variation of the same idea. That makes reviews faster and makes the visuals feel like a cohesive system.

The Nano Banana Flash prompt framework

Use this simple structure to keep prompts consistent:

"[subject], [context], [style], [lighting], [composition], [constraints]"

  • Subject: the main object or scene.
  • Context: where the subject is and what it is doing.
  • Style: photoreal, illustration, 3D, or another clear style.
  • Lighting: soft, studio, natural, or high contrast.
  • Composition: centered, top left space, wide hero, or close up.
  • Constraints: aspect ratio, background, and any must have elements.

Example:

"Minimalist smartwatch product hero, studio scene, premium photography, soft light, centered composition, clean background, 16:9"

This structure is short, readable, and easy to reuse. If you only change one element at a time, the outputs stay comparable.

Add brand controls without overloading the prompt

Brand control works best when it is specific and minimal. Pick three to five core cues and repeat them. Examples include:

  • Brand colors: "neutral gray and warm beige"
  • Mood: "calm, minimal, confident"
  • Typography space: "leave negative space on the right"
  • Texture: "soft matte background"

Avoid long lists of adjectives. Too many style words can pull the image in multiple directions. Keep the signal strong by using fewer, clearer cues.

When to use reference images

Text prompts are great for exploration. Reference images are best when you need consistency. Use image-to-image when you already have a visual style that works and you want variations that feel like the same campaign.

When you use a reference image, describe what should stay the same. For example:

"Use the reference style and lighting, keep the centered composition, preserve the neutral background, add subtle depth of field."

This makes it clear what should be preserved and what can change. If you want a full workflow, see Nano Banana Flash Image-to-Image.

Prompt templates for common marketing needs

Replace the bracketed text with your details.

Landing page hero

"[product] hero image, clean studio background, premium photoreal style, soft lighting, centered composition, negative space for headline, 16:9"

"[product] in use, lifestyle scene, warm light, candid photography, clear focal point, space for CTA, 4:5"

Social series post

"[subject] on branded background, minimal composition, brand colors, soft gradient, consistent lighting, 1:1"

Email header

"minimal abstract background, subtle texture, brand palette, wide banner layout, 2:1"

Product mockup

"[product] mockup on simple pedestal, studio lighting, premium materials, clean background, 4:5"

Feature highlight card

"isometric illustration of [feature], flat vector style, brand colors, clean grid layout, 1:1"

Testimonial backdrop

"neutral gradient background, soft shapes, minimal style, space for quote, 16:9"

For additional examples, see Prompt Recipes for Marketing Teams.

Iteration workflow that saves credits

The fastest way to improve results is to iterate with intent. Follow this approach:

  1. Generate 4 to 6 variations with the base prompt.
  2. Pick the strongest candidate based on composition and clarity.
  3. Change one element at a time, such as lighting or background.
  4. Save the best prompt and label it by channel and campaign.

This avoids wasting credits on random experimentation. It also creates a trail of prompt improvements you can reuse later. Nano Banana Flash shows the credit cost before each run, so you can decide which iterations are worth it.

Troubleshooting off brand results

If the output does not match your brand, check these areas:

  • Subject clarity: is the subject specific enough?
  • Style alignment: did you specify a clear style and mood?
  • Composition: did you define framing and negative space?
  • Constraints: did you include aspect ratio and background?

If the image still drifts, use image-to-image with a reference. That anchors the style and gives you more control. If you are new to structured prompts, start with Prompting Basics.

Build a shared prompt library

A prompt library keeps your team consistent and fast. Start a shared document with a short list of templates. For each template, include:

  • A name and use case
  • The prompt text
  • Recommended aspect ratios
  • Notes on what to change safely

Over time, this becomes a brand asset. New team members can start with proven prompts instead of guessing, and campaigns stay consistent across quarters.

FAQ

How long should a Nano Banana Flash prompt be?

Long enough to be specific and short enough to be readable. A structured prompt with six to eight elements is usually enough.

Can I reuse prompts across campaigns?

Yes. Keep the structure stable and update subject and context. This is the fastest way to keep a consistent look.

Do I need a reference image for every prompt?

No. Use text only prompts for exploration and references when you need tight consistency.

How do I avoid cluttered compositions?

Add a composition constraint like "centered subject" and "clean background." Mention negative space if you plan to add copy.

Where should I start if I am new to prompts?

Start with the framework in this guide, generate a small set, and compare results side by side. Save the best prompt as your baseline.


Ready to test your first prompt? Start in the AI Image Generator and build a small library you can reuse in every campaign.