| name | emotion-metaphor-image-prompting |
| description | Craft and iteratively refine image-generation and image-edit prompts that turn subtle feelings, idioms, pressure, or social dynamics into concrete visual metaphors. Use when a user can describe the emotion but not the picture yet, when a generated image is close but not exact, or when Codex needs to preserve style while correcting one visible signal at a time. |
Emotion Metaphor Image Prompting
Overview
Turn a vague emotional description into a concrete visual scene, then tighten the image through targeted edit prompts. Prefer visual mechanics over abstract mood words: identify what the viewer must literally see.
Workflow
- Extract the emotional mechanics.
- Identify the subject, the pressure source, the forced action, and the contradiction.
- Translate idioms into visible objects, body positions, and scene dynamics.
- Build the first prompt from visible signals.
- Specify subject, setting, props, action, expression, and emotional duality.
- Add style only after the scene is concrete.
- Refine with preserve-style edits.
- Start each edit prompt by naming what must remain unchanged.
- State one key correction in plain language.
- Add hard visual constraints that the model cannot plausibly miss.
- Add negative constraints for the common failure mode you just saw.
- Diagnose failures visually.
- Replace vague feedback like "not the right feeling" with concrete mismatches like "the duck is still standing" or "the rope is blending into the speech letters."
Prompt Rules
- Prefer "the viewer must immediately understand X" over "make it feel more X."
- Specify body mechanics when tension matters: stretched neck, dangling legs, feet off ground, shadow gap, taut rope.
- Separate physical objects from symbolic effects. If both a rope and floating letters matter, state that they must be visually distinct.
- Use preserve-style edit prompts once the image is close. Do not rewrite the whole scene unless the generation is fundamentally wrong.
- Change one core visual signal per edit pass unless the current image is far from the intended metaphor.
- Name failure-prevention constraints explicitly: "no human figure," "do not replace the rope with glowing lines," "do not let the feet touch the stage."
- Preserve emotional duality. Many strong metaphor images need two tones at once, such as painful and funny, pressured and brave, awkward and sincere.
Edit Strategy
When a user says "this is close, but not yet," do this:
- Keep a short list of preserved elements at the front of the prompt.
- Describe the single incorrect visual fact.
- Convert that fact into measurable geometry or material detail.
- Add one or two "must not" lines based on the last failure.
- Keep the same emotional tone so the fix does not flatten the image.
References
- Read
references/prompt-patterns.md for reusable first-pass and edit-pass templates, common failure patterns, and the worked German-practice duck example.