AI image generator for creating, editing, and comparing images in one workflow
Submit the form to generate an image.
What the AI image generator is for
Use this AI image generator when you want to create images from prompts, edit existing visuals, compare model behavior, and keep the whole image workflow inside one workspace.
Why use the AI image generator in Studio
One selector for many image models
Move between generation and editing models without leaving the same Studio image workflow.
- Shared model selector
- Current model auto-positioning
- Unified prompt and output flow
Image generation and editing in one app
Handle prompt-led creation, image edits, and multimodal image tasks from the same workload entry.
- Text-to-image workflows
- Image-to-image and edit flows
- Faster model comparison before committing
Studio workflow from draft to result
Generate, review, and iterate inside the same app instead of treating each model like a separate product.
- Single workload entry
- Output review in context
- Easy handoff to dedicated model pages
AI image generator use cases
These are the situations where one shared image workflow is more useful than picking a single model first.
Test multiple image models against the same prompt or edit brief before you settle on one workflow for the project.
Stay inside one image workspace while you move from prompt-led generation into edits, refinements, or alternate model passes.
Use the app when the team wants one shared image entry point, then branch into a dedicated model page only when a specific model needs deeper control.
How to use the AI image generator
Choose the model, add the right prompt or source image, then generate and switch models only when the task needs it.
Choose the image model
Start with the model selector to pick the image workflow that best matches generation, editing, or multimodal guidance.
Write the brief or upload the source image
Add the prompt, source image, or edit instruction that matches the selected model and workflow.
Generate, review, and switch if needed
Run the image, review the result, then switch models in the same app if the task needs a different visual style or editing capability.
When to use the AI image generator instead of a model page
Use the AI image generator when the project is still exploratory and you expect to test several image models against the same prompt, reference image, or edit brief. It keeps the first rounds of iteration fast because you can stay inside one workspace while you compare results.
Once you know which model consistently fits the task, you can move into the dedicated model page for deeper controls or model-specific setup. That makes this tool a strong starting point for general image work, while model pages become the place for more specialized refinement.
How to get better results from the AI image generator
The best results usually start with a clear task definition: are you generating from scratch, editing a source image, or comparing several models for the same visual brief? That decision makes it easier to choose the right prompt style, source asset, and model switch strategy.
If one model gives you the right composition but another gives you cleaner detail or a better edit pass, use the shared workflow to compare before committing. That is often faster than forcing one model to handle every stage of the image job.
AI image generator FAQs
Helpful answers about app-level image workflows, model switching, and when to use dedicated model pages.
Related image workflows and pages
Open related workflows for image restyling and result-specific pages such as logos, avatars, and anime images.
Turn one image into watercolor, comic, anime, clay, and other stylized looks.
Create logo directions, icons, and brand marks faster with the right image tools and models.
Create creator, team, and character avatars with image generation, style transfer, and enhancement workflows.
Create anime portraits, characters, and stylized scenes from prompts or source images.
Start with the AI image generator
Open the shared image workflow now, or jump into a dedicated model page if you already know which model the task needs.