studioglobal
인기 있는 발견
갤러리게시됨0 소스

리테일 POS용 인쇄 가능한 AI: 브리프부터 승인까지

가까이서 보는 리테일 POS라도 AI 이미지를 300% 확대 화면만 보고 승인하거나 탈락시키면 안 됩니다. 실제 레이아웃, 최종 배치 크기, 1:1 부분 출력으로 판단해야 합니다. 가장 안전한 방식은 하이브리드입니다.

17K0
Retail POS display concept for a transformable stroller using AI-generated lifestyle imagery and print-ready layout review.
Print-Ready AI for Retail POS: A Workflow for Briefing, Testing, and Approving ImagesAI-generated editorial image illustrating a print-ready retail POS workflow for a stroller-to-ride-on display.
AI 프롬프트

Create a landscape editorial hero image for this Studio Global article: Print-Ready AI for Retail POS: A Workflow for Briefing, Testing, and Approving Images. Article summary: For close view retail POS, do not approve or reject AI imagery at 300% zoom alone.. Topic tags: ai, image generation, retail design, print design, graphic design. Reference image context from search candidates: Reference image 1: visual subject "Search for a command to run... # Fast Retail Store Visualization with AI. Retailers are increasingly turning to Artificial Intelligence (AI) to transform their operations, particul" source context "Fast Retail Store Visualization with AI" Reference image 2: visual subject "Search for a command to run... # Fast Retail Store Visualization with AI. Retailers are increasingly turning to Artificial Intelligence (AI) to transform their operations, particul" source context "Fast R

openai.com

출처 안내: 이 리서치 세션에는 외부 출처 목록이 제공되지 않았습니다. 아래의 인쇄 해상도와 제작 기준은 범용 생산 사양이 아니라 실무용 워크플로 조언입니다. 최종 출고 전에는 반드시 인쇄소 또는 POS 제작 업체의 요구 사항을 확인해야 합니다.

AI는 리테일 POS, 즉 매장 진열용 디스플레이 디자인에 충분히 유용합니다. 다만 인쇄까지 가는 작업은 단순히 이미지를 생성해서 레이아웃에 얹는 수준으로 끝나지 않습니다. 핵심은 두 가지 일을 분리하는 것입니다. 하나는 AI로 더 좋은 아이디어를 빠르게 탐색하는 일이고, 다른 하나는 최종 인쇄물에 들어갈 이미지를 실제 사용 환경에서 검증하는 일입니다.

유모차가 라이드온으로 변신하는 제품이라면 메시지는 아주 명확해야 합니다. 매장 앞을 지나가는 고객이 여러 장의 작은 이미지를 해독하게 만들면 안 됩니다. POS가 말해야 할 이야기는 하나입니다. 유모차 모드가 라이드온 모드로 바뀐다. 이 메시지가 몇 초 안에 보여야 합니다.

AI 도구보다 먼저 매장 메시지를 정한다

전면 패널에서 가장 강한 방향은 보통 가장 단순한 방향입니다. 변신 자체를 주인공으로 만드는 것입니다.

전면 패널의 정보 위계는 이렇게 잡는 편이 좋습니다.

  • 상단에 브랜드와 짧은 헤드라인
  • 한쪽에는 유모차 모드의 큰 라이프스타일 이미지
  • 다른 쪽에는 라이드온 모드의 큰 라이프스타일 이미지
  • 두 모드를 연결하는 굵지만 깔끔한 전환 그래픽, 예를 들어 화살표, 모션 라인, 분할 화면, 모핑 느낌의 그래픽
  • 2-in-1 stroller + ride-on 또는 grows with your child처럼 짧은 혜택 문구
  • 실제 제품이 가리는 하단부는 최대한 깨끗하게 유지

여러 개의 작은 원형 라이프스타일 컷에 기대는 방식은 안전해 보일 수 있습니다. 작은 이미지가 AI 이미지의 약한 부분을 숨겨주기 때문입니다. 하지만 동시에 메시지도 약해집니다. 고객이 제품의 변신 구조를 이해하는 데 몇 초 이상 걸린다면, 레이아웃이 너무 많은 일을 하려는 것입니다.

후면 패널은 설명하되, 과하게 채우지 않는다

후면 패널은 전면보다 정보를 더 담을 수 있습니다. 그래도 복잡한 기능 목록으로 채우기보다 단순한 2단계 흐름이 더 이해하기 쉽습니다.

  1. 유모차 모드
  2. 라이드온 모드

그 아래에는 구매 판단에 도움이 되는 혜택만 남기는 것이 좋습니다.

  • 2-in-1 디자인
  • 빠른 전환
  • 아이 성장에 맞춰 사용
  • 부모가 밀어주는 모드에서 아이가 직접 타는 모드로 전환

변신 과정을 영상으로 보여줘야 한다면 QR 코드 영역을 명확히 확보하세요. QR 코드는 장식이 아니라 기능 요소입니다. 복잡한 배경 위에 얹지 말고, 스캔이 쉬운 깨끗한 영역에 배치하는 것이 좋습니다.

AI는 두 가지 용도로 나눠 써야 한다

POS 작업에서 AI는 크게 두 단계에서 다르게 쓰는 것이 좋습니다.

1. 컨셉과 아이데이션

AI는 레이아웃 방향, 변신을 보여주는 그래픽 방식, 무드보드, 헤드라인 표현, 전면과 후면의 시스템을 빠르게 탐색하는 데 유용합니다. 빈 페이지에서 출발할 때 팀이 더 빨리 여러 가능성을 보게 해주는 역할입니다.

2. 최종 이미지 후보 제작

최종 인쇄물에 들어갈 가능성이 있는 이미지는 훨씬 더 엄격하게 봐야 합니다. 채팅창이나 미리보기 화면에서 그럴듯해 보이는지가 기준이 아닙니다. 실제 POS 레이아웃 안에서, 실제 인쇄 크기로, 실제 고객이 보는 거리에서 버티는지가 기준입니다.

이 구분이 중요합니다. 거친 AI 시안은 생산용으로 완벽하지 않아도 충분히 가치가 있습니다. 반대로 최종 POS 이미지는 보기 좋은 시안이 아니라 검증된 제작물이 되어야 합니다.

제품은 실사로, 환경은 AI로 만드는 하이브리드가 안전하다

제품 정확도가 중요한 경우에는 유모차 자체를 AI에만 맡기지 않는 편이 안전합니다. 실제 제품 사진이나 정확한 렌더를 중심 자산으로 쓰고, AI는 그 주변을 보완하는 방식이 좋습니다.

실제 제품 자산을 써야 하는 영역은 다음과 같습니다.

  • 히어로 제품 이미지
  • 변신 단계
  • 기계적 구조와 디테일
  • 제품 모서리, 바퀴, 패브릭, 비율
  • 실제 제품 정확도가 중요한 모든 영역

AI를 쓰기 좋은 영역은 다음과 같습니다.

  • 라이프스타일 환경
  • 배경 맥락
  • 무드와 분위기
  • 컨셉 탐색
  • 대체 레이아웃 방향

그다음에는 리터칭으로 인쇄 품질에 더 가깝게 다듬어야 합니다. 가장자리 정리, 손과 얼굴 보정, 질감 복원, 그림자 매칭, 선택적 샤프닝, AI 특유의 지나치게 매끈한 느낌 줄이기 등이 포함될 수 있습니다.

300% 확대는 진단용이지 승인 기준이 아니다

300% 화면 확대는 약한 부분을 찾는 데 도움이 됩니다. 하지만 POS 이미지를 최종 승인하거나 탈락시키는 기준으로 쓰기에는 과합니다. 극단적인 확대는 진단 도구이지, 매장 사용성을 판단하는 기준이 아닙니다.

더 나은 승인 과정은 이렇게 잡는 것입니다.

  1. 이미지를 실제 POS 레이아웃에 배치한다.
  2. 최종 배치 크기로 확인한다.
  3. 얼굴, 손, 제품 가장자리, 바퀴, 제품과 배경이 만나는 경계처럼 민감한 부분을 확인한다.
  4. 애매한 경우에는 문제 영역을 1:1 크기로 부분 출력한다.
  5. 고객이 실제로 볼 거리에서 확인한다. 고객이 가까이 다가와 만질 수 있는 POS라면 가까운 거리에서도 함께 본다.

화면에서 300%로 봤을 때 얼굴이 조금 부드러워 보인다고 해서 자동으로 사용할 수 없는 이미지는 아닙니다. 그 뜻은 탈락이 아니라, 실제 맥락에서 테스트해야 한다는 뜻에 가깝습니다.

POS 안에서도 품질 영역을 나눈다

POS 전체가 같은 수준의 이미지 품질을 요구하는 것은 아닙니다. 실무적으로는 디스플레이를 영역별로 나누는 편이 훨씬 합리적입니다.

엄격하게 봐야 하는 영역

다음 영역은 가장 꼼꼼하게 검수해야 합니다.

  • 히어로 제품 사진
  • 아이의 얼굴과 손
  • 제품 모서리, 바퀴, 패브릭, 기계적 디테일
  • 실제 제품 사진과 AI 생성 환경이 만나는 경계
  • 로고, 글자, 아이콘, 화살표, 바코드, QR 코드

이 영역에서는 가능한 한 좋은 제품 사진을 사용하고, 로고와 글자, 아이콘, 화살표 등은 벡터로 유지하는 것이 좋습니다. 리터칭도 가장 엄격하게 해야 합니다.

어느 정도 부드러움을 허용할 수 있는 영역

다음 영역은 전체적으로 고급스럽고 자연스럽게 보인다면 어느 정도의 부드러움을 허용할 수 있습니다.

  • 라이프스타일 배경
  • 아웃포커스된 풍경
  • 부드러운 그림자
  • 은은한 브랜드 형태나 컬러 필드

믿을 만한 라이프스타일 이미지는 모든 부분이 똑같이 날카로울 필요가 없습니다. 실제 사진에서도 자연스러운 심도 표현이 있습니다. 오히려 배경까지 전부 칼같이 선명하면 합성처럼 보일 수 있습니다.

가려지는 영역

이 유모차 POS의 경우 전면 패널 하단은 실제 제품에 의해 상당 부분 가려집니다. 이 영역에는 중요한 메시지를 넣지 않는 것이 좋습니다. 깨끗하고 조용하게 남겨두거나, 아주 은은한 배경 요소 정도만 허용하는 편이 안전합니다.

무조건 300dpi가 아니라 배치 해상도로 판단한다

디자인 파일에서 중요한 질문은 모든 이미지가 300dpi인지가 아닙니다. 더 정확한 질문은 각 이미지가 최종 인쇄 크기, 고객이 보는 거리, 레이아웃 안에서 맡는 역할에 충분한 픽셀을 갖고 있는가입니다.

실무에서는 dpi와 ppi를 혼용해 말하는 경우가 많지만, 배치 이미지에서는 보통 ppi, 즉 인치당 픽셀 수를 기준으로 생각하는 편이 이해하기 쉽습니다. 최종 기준은 제작 업체와 확인해야 합니다.

내부 작업 기준으로는 다음처럼 나눌 수 있습니다.

  • 글자, 로고, 아이콘, 화살표, QR 코드, 바코드는 가능하면 벡터로 유지
  • 히어로 제품 사진과 크게 보이는 얼굴은 가능한 높은 배치 해상도와 꼼꼼한 리터칭 적용
  • 큰 라이프스타일 이미지는 최종 크기로 확인하고, 애매하면 1:1 부분 출력으로 테스트
  • 배경 전용 영역은 전체 이미지가 고급스럽게 보인다면 통제된 부드러움을 허용

계산은 단순합니다.

text
최종 인쇄 크기 인치 × 목표 ppi = 필요한 픽셀 크기

예를 들어 24 × 36인치로 배치되는 이미지라면 필요한 픽셀 크기는 다음과 같습니다.

  • 200ppi 기준: 4,800 × 7,200픽셀
  • 300ppi 기준: 7,200 × 10,800픽셀

가까이서 보는 디스플레이라면 얼굴, 손, 제품 디테일에는 더 엄격해야 합니다. 하지만 배경이나 라이프스타일 분위기 영역까지 작은 글자나 손에 들고 보는 브로슈어와 같은 기준으로 볼 필요는 없습니다.

Nano Banana 같은 이미지 모델용 프롬프트 예시

이미지 모델에는 더 혁신적으로 만들어 달라고만 요청하면 결과가 흐려지기 쉽습니다. 매장 목표, 물리적 구조, 가려지는 영역, 정보 위계, 시각 스타일을 함께 알려줘야 합니다.

아래는 그대로 응용할 수 있는 프롬프트 예시입니다.

text
레퍼런스 이미지에 있는 기존 Globber POS 형식을 재디자인해 주세요. 전체 구조는 유지합니다. 하나의 세로형 백 패널과 하나의 직사각형 베이스 플랫폼으로 구성해 주세요.

목표는 유모차에서 라이드온으로 바뀌는 변신 구조를 혁신적이고 프리미엄하게, 그리고 멀리서도 즉시 이해되게 만드는 것입니다. 디자인은 변신 과정을 아주 단순한 시각 방식으로 전달해야 하며, 매장에서 강한 주목도를 가지되 복잡하면 안 됩니다.

첨부된 유모차 모드와 라이드온 모드의 라이프스타일 이미지를 사용해 주세요. 전면 패널에는 작은 원형 컷이나 흰 배경의 단독 제품컷 대신 큰 프리미엄 라이프스타일 이미지를 사용해 주세요. 유모차 모드가 라이드온 모드로 전환되는 이야기가 전면의 핵심이 되도록 해 주세요. 두 모드를 연결하기 위해 방향 화살표, 분할 구성, 모션 패스 같은 굵지만 우아한 시각 장치를 사용해 주세요.

전면 패널의 하단 절반은 매장에서 실제 제품이 가리기 때문에 대부분 깨끗하게 비워 주세요. 그 영역에는 아주 약한 배경 그래픽이나 은은한 브랜드 요소만 허용합니다. 핵심 메시지는 전면 패널의 상단 절반에 집중해 주세요.

디자인 스타일은 깨끗하고 현대적이며 프리미엄하고 과감한 리테일용 디자인처럼 보여야 합니다. 몇 걸음 떨어진 거리에서 2초 안에 이해되어야 합니다. 강한 정보 위계, 절제된 타이포그래피, 단순한 혜택 문구를 사용해 주세요. 복잡한 콜아웃, 많은 장식, 작은 원형 이미지, 흰 배경 카탈로그처럼 보이는 디자인은 피해주세요.

후면 패널은 단순하고 우아한 2단계 변신 스토리로 구성해 주세요. 제품이 유모차에서 라이드온으로 바뀌는 과정을 명확한 시각 순서로 보여주세요. 2-in-1, 빠른 전환, 아이 성장에 맞춰 사용 같은 간결한 혜택 메시지를 포함해 주세요. 후면도 깨끗하고 프리미엄하게 유지해 주세요.

전면과 후면 패널 디자인을 함께 보여주는 하나의 프레젠테이션 이미지를 만들어 주세요. 실제 매장용 POS 제안서처럼 현실적이고 전문적으로 보이게 해 주세요.

레퍼런스 이미지의 Globber 브랜드 느낌과 컬러를 활용해 주세요. 특히 깨끗한 화이트 베이스와 시안 컬러 포인트를 유지해 주세요. 제품의 실제 비율과 구조는 보존해 주세요. 디지털 광고 포스터가 아니라 실제 인쇄되는 리테일 POS처럼 보이게 해 주세요.

결과물이 너무 복잡하게 나오면 아래 제약을 추가하세요.

  • 작은 원형 라이프스타일 버블 사용 금지
  • 복잡한 콜라주 레이아웃 금지
  • 지나치게 유아적이거나 장난감 같은 스타일 금지
  • 흰 배경 카탈로그 이미지처럼 보이는 구성 금지
  • 전면 하단 절반에 중요한 그래픽이나 문구 배치 금지
  • 전면 상단은 하나의 변신 스토리에만 집중
  • 전면과 후면 패널을 함께 보여주는 리테일 디스플레이 콘셉트로 제작

팀 승인 기준은 단순해야 한다

팀 안에서는 규칙을 단순하게 정하는 것이 좋습니다. AI 이미지는 실제 맥락에서 검토하기 전에는 탈락시키지 않는다. 이것만 정해도 불필요한 주관적 논쟁을 크게 줄일 수 있습니다.

검토 패키지에는 다음이 포함되면 좋습니다.

  • 전체 POS 레이아웃
  • 최종 배치 크기로 들어간 이미지
  • 얼굴, 손, 제품 가장자리, 전환 경계 영역의 주요 크롭
  • 품질이 애매한 경우 1:1 부분 출력
  • 사용 가능, 리터칭 후 사용 가능, 사용 불가 중 하나의 추천 의견

이렇게 하면 논의가 AI라서 가짜 같다는 감각적 판단에서 벗어나, 반복 가능한 제작 프로세스로 바뀝니다.

결론

리테일 POS에서 인쇄 가능한 AI 이미지를 쓴다는 것은 모든 AI 결과물을 받아들이자는 뜻이 아닙니다. 가능성이 있는 이미지를 실제 사용 방식대로 테스트하자는 뜻입니다.

유모차에서 라이드온으로 변신하는 제품의 POS라면 가장 강한 방향은 하이브리드입니다. 제품 정확도는 실사 사진이나 정확한 렌더로 확보하고, AI는 라이프스타일 맥락과 분위기, 아이디어 탐색에 활용합니다. 전면은 변신 스토리를 크게 보여주고, 핵심 그래픽은 벡터로 유지하며, 최종 승인은 300% 확대 화면이 아니라 실제 레이아웃, 최종 크기, 1:1 출력 테스트를 기준으로 내려야 합니다.

Studio Global AI

Search, cite, and publish your own answer

Use this topic as a starting point for a fresh source-backed answer, then compare citations before you share it.

Studio Global AI로 검색 및 팩트체크

주요 시사점

  • 가까이서 보는 리테일 POS라도 AI 이미지를 300% 확대 화면만 보고 승인하거나 탈락시키면 안 됩니다. 실제 레이아웃, 최종 배치 크기, 1:1 부분 출력으로 판단해야 합니다.
  • 가장 안전한 방식은 하이브리드입니다. 제품은 실사 사진이나 정확한 렌더를 쓰고, AI는 라이프스타일 배경과 분위기, 시안 탐색에 활용합니다.
  • 유모차에서 라이드온으로 바뀌는 제품이라면 전면 패널은 변신 과정을 주인공으로 만들어야 합니다. 큰 라이프스타일 이미지 두 장, 명확한 전환 그래픽, 짧은 문구, 깨끗한 하단 구성이 핵심입니다.

사람들은 또한 묻습니다.

"리테일 POS용 인쇄 가능한 AI: 브리프부터 승인까지"에 대한 짧은 대답은 무엇입니까?

가까이서 보는 리테일 POS라도 AI 이미지를 300% 확대 화면만 보고 승인하거나 탈락시키면 안 됩니다. 실제 레이아웃, 최종 배치 크기, 1:1 부분 출력으로 판단해야 합니다.

먼저 검증할 핵심 포인트는 무엇인가요?

가까이서 보는 리테일 POS라도 AI 이미지를 300% 확대 화면만 보고 승인하거나 탈락시키면 안 됩니다. 실제 레이아웃, 최종 배치 크기, 1:1 부분 출력으로 판단해야 합니다. 가장 안전한 방식은 하이브리드입니다. 제품은 실사 사진이나 정확한 렌더를 쓰고, AI는 라이프스타일 배경과 분위기, 시안 탐색에 활용합니다.

실무에서는 다음으로 무엇을 해야 합니까?

유모차에서 라이드온으로 바뀌는 제품이라면 전면 패널은 변신 과정을 주인공으로 만들어야 합니다. 큰 라이프스타일 이미지 두 장, 명확한 전환 그래픽, 짧은 문구, 깨끗한 하단 구성이 핵심입니다.

다음에는 어떤 관련 주제를 탐구해야 할까요?

다른 각도와 추가 인용을 보려면 "빅토리아풍 루프톱 인물 사진을 만드는 AI 이미지 프롬프트"으로 계속하세요.

관련 페이지 열기

이것을 무엇과 비교해야 합니까?

"Why This AI Image Prompt Isn’t Ready to Publish"에 대해 이 답변을 대조 확인하세요.

관련 페이지 열기

연구를 계속하세요

연구 대화

당신

연구문제

We are designing a POS for our stroller. The stroller transforms from a stroller to a ride-on. The stroller goes on the base platform and we want to POS to clearly communicate the transformability. You can reference POS front and POS back files that I attached for the current format. How can I prompt nano banana to give me a more innovative design? Or do you have any ideas to improve the design? We need to keep the bottom section of the front open from design elements, because the product will cover that area.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Yes — the main opportunity is to make the transformation legible in 2 seconds. Right now the POS shows both modes, but the “why this is different” is still a bit too subtle; the shopper has to study it instead of instantly understanding “this stroller becomes a ride-on.”

  • What feels weak in the current design:

    • The front has multiple floating images, so the eye doesn’t know what to read first.
    • The transform story is implied, not dramatized.
    • The small circular lifestyle photos add proof, but they compete with the product.
    • On the back, the transformation steps are there, but they’re too small to become the hero message.
  • The clearest design move:

    • Make the front about one single idea: “Transforms from stroller to ride-on.”
    • Use the upper 60–70% of the front panel as one strong visual story.
    • Keep the lower front zone clean, since the actual product will occupy it.
  • Best front layout direction:

    • Top: strong headline.
    • Upper-middle: large side-by-side or morphing visual of the two modes.
    • Between them: one bold directional transform cue.
    • Small support copy: “2 modes. 1 smart ride.” or “Stroll mode to ride-on mode in seconds.”
    • Bottom 30–40%: intentionally empty except maybe a very faint background shape.
  • A stronger visual system than the current one:

    • Use a left-to-right story:
      • Left = stroller mode
      • Right = ride-on mode
      • Middle = bold arrow / motion path / “flip” cue
    • Or use one “hybrid” hero image:
      • stroller on one side
      • ride-on on the other
      • a seamless split or morph effect
    • This will communicate transformation faster than separate scattered images.
  • Good headline options:

    • Stroll. Flip. Ride.
    • From Stroller to Ride-On
    • 2-in-1 That Grows With Them
    • One Ride, Two Modes
    • Transforms in Seconds
    • Stroller + Learning Bike in One
  • Better copy than “World’s 1st patented stroller plus learning bike,” for retail readability:

    • A stroller that transforms into a ride-on
    • 2-in-1 stroller + ride-on
    • Transforms from parent-push to kid-ride
    • Grows from stroller mode to ride-on fun
  • How I’d improve the front specifically:

    • Enlarge the product visuals significantly.
    • Remove at least one or two of the small round lifestyle images.
    • Replace the circles with one clean transformation diagram.
    • Use a bold cyan motion ribbon or arrow shape to connect the two states.
    • Add a very short benefit line:
      • Push mode for parents
      • Ride-on mode for kids
    • Keep the lower front area completely free of dense copy or key graphics.
  • How I’d improve the back:

    • Turn it into a simple 3-step “How it transforms” panel.
    • Use numbered icons:
        1. Start in stroller mode
        1. Fold / adjust
        1. Ride-on mode
    • Add 2–3 benefit icons:
      • Grows with child
      • Easy transition
      • Compact / lightweight / fun
    • Include a QR code to a 10-second demo video.
    • Make the product sequence much larger than it is now.
  • More innovative POS concepts:

    • Concept 1: “Split Identity”
      • Front panel split vertically.
      • Left half visually styled for stroller mode.
      • Right half visually styled for ride-on mode.
      • Product hero overlaps both halves.
      • Clean, premium, immediate.
    • Concept 2: “Motion Path”
      • A bold curved path sweeps across the upper panel showing the transformation journey.
      • The path can continue subtly onto the base platform.
      • Makes the POS feel dynamic.
    • Concept 3: “Before / After Hero”
      • Huge “before” and “after” silhouettes.
      • Very minimal text.
      • Strongest for quick retail communication.
    • Concept 4: “Parent to Child”
      • Show parent-push mode transitioning to child independence.
      • Emotionally stronger if your goal is “growth” and “development.”
    • Concept 5: “Interactive Retail”
      • Add a flip-panel, lenticular image, or pull-tab that changes the product from stroller to ride-on.
      • This is the most innovative if budget allows.
  • Smart base-platform ideas:

    • Since the stroller sits on it, use the base as a support graphic, not a message-heavy area.
    • Good options:
      • subtle wheel tracks / motion line
      • a faint directional arrow leading to the front panel
      • a clean “2-in-1” badge
      • a parked silhouette outline showing intended product placement
    • Avoid too much type on the base, since the product will visually dominate it.
  • Color and hierarchy suggestions:

    • Keep white space, but use it more intentionally.
    • Use one accent color for the transformation cue only.
    • Make stroller mode and ride-on mode slightly color-coded.
    • Use fewer background circles; they currently feel decorative rather than communicative.
    • Let the transformation graphic do the work.
  • If you want Nano Banana to generate better concepts, your prompt should be very constraint-based.

    • Don’t just ask for “more innovative.”
    • Tell it:
      • the retail objective
      • the exact physical format
      • what must stay blank
      • what visual hierarchy matters most
      • the tone: premium, modern, family, clever, not cluttered
  • Prompt you can use for Nano Banana:

    • Design a retail POS graphic for a stroller brand called Globber. The product transforms from stroller mode into a ride-on mode. The main objective is to communicate the transformation instantly from 6–10 feet away. Use a premium, modern, minimal visual style with strong hierarchy and clean white space. Keep the lower 35–40% of the front panel mostly empty because the real product will cover that area. The front panel should focus on one bold transformation story using large product visuals, a clear directional cue, and very short headline copy. Avoid clutter, too many small photos, or scattered elements. Show both modes clearly and make the “before to after” transformation the hero. Use Globber’s cyan accent color sparingly for arrows, motion graphics, or key labels. The back panel should show a simple 3-step transformation sequence and 2–3 benefit icons. Create 3 different design directions: 1) premium split-screen concept, 2) dynamic motion-path concept, 3) minimal before-and-after concept.
  • Even better prompt if you want stronger output:

    • Create 3 innovative POS concepts for a stroller display. The stroller sits on a base platform in front of a vertical backboard. The product transforms from a stroller into a ride-on. The design must make this transformability obvious in under 2 seconds to shoppers walking by. Front panel constraints: keep the bottom section clear of important graphics because the product blocks that area; use only the upper area for messaging. Prioritize one large hero visual over many small images. Show stroller mode and ride-on mode with a bold visual transition. Style should feel premium, clean, clever, and retail-ready, not childish or busy. Back panel should explain how it works with a clean 3-step sequence, lifestyle reinforcement, and a QR code area. Include short headline ideas and placement recommendations.
  • If you want Nano Banana to stay close to your current format:

    • Redesign this existing POS format for better communication of transformability. Keep the same general structure: vertical back panel plus rectangular base platform. Improve the front by simplifying the composition, enlarging the product imagery, reducing small lifestyle circles, and making the stroller-to-ride-on transformation the main story. Keep the bottom front area free of key design elements because the product covers it. Make it feel more innovative and retail impactful while staying clean and premium.
  • My strongest recommendation:

    • Front = one big transformation visual, one headline, one support line.
    • Back = three steps + benefits + QR.
    • Remove decorative clutter and make the “change from one mode to another” dramatically obvious.
  • A very practical front-wireframe idea:

    • Top:
      • GLOBBER logo
      • “Stroll. Flip. Ride.”
    • Middle upper:
      • large stroller visual on left
      • bold cyan arrow / morph graphic
      • large ride-on visual on right
    • Small line below:
      • “2-in-1 stroller + ride-on”
    • Lower area:
      • mostly blank for product overlap
      • maybe only a faint oversized brand graphic in the background

If you want, I can do either of these next:

  • write 5 polished Nano Banana prompts in different creative directions, or
  • sketch a recommended front/back layout in words so your designer can build it immediately.
당신

연구문제

The issue I'm having is that my design lead is resistant to or unknowledgeable in how to generate AI images that are high resolution enough to print. She says that the bubbles she created are the largest she can go; otherwise, the pictures become too smooth and look fake. But I know other brands and people are doing it. But is she right?

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

She’s partly right, but not fully. Raw AI images often do fall apart when enlarged for print, especially on faces, hands, wheels, fabric, and product edges, but that does not mean AI can’t be used for print-ready POS. It means the workflow has to be set up correctly.

  • Where she is right:

    • Many AI-generated images look good on screen but break at print size.
    • Common failures are:
      • waxy or overly smooth skin
      • fake-looking hands
      • mushy textures
      • distorted product geometry
      • soft edges after scaling
    • Circular “bubble” crops can hide those flaws, which is probably why she is keeping them small.
  • Where she is not right:

    • Other brands are absolutely using AI in print.
    • They usually are not just taking one AI image and dropping it into a full-size print file.
    • They use a production workflow:
      • generate
      • upscale
      • retouch
      • composite with real photography
      • sharpen selectively
      • color-correct for print
  • The key misunderstanding is usually resolution requirements.

    • For print, not everything needs 300 dpi at full-size.
    • For retail POS viewed from a few feet away:
      • 150 ppi at final size is often very good
      • 100 ppi is often acceptable for larger-format displays
      • sometimes even lower works if the viewing distance is longer
    • 300 ppi is more important for close-held print like brochures, not always for a floor POS panel.
  • So if she is saying:

    • “AI cannot be printed large” → not correct
    • “AI cannot be enlarged carelessly without artifacts” → correct
  • The real issue is probably one of these:

    • She’s using a tool that outputs too small.
    • She’s enlarging with a weak upscaling method.
    • She’s relying on fully AI-generated product/lifestyle shots instead of hybrid compositing.
    • She’s judging quality at 100% zoom on screen instead of at final viewing distance.
    • She doesn’t have a retouch workflow after generation.
  • Best-practice workflow for print POS:

    • Use real product photography for the stroller itself.
    • Use AI for:
      • background scene
      • mood/lifestyle environment
      • supporting secondary imagery
      • concept comps
    • If people are shown, retouch faces/hands manually.
    • Upscale using a dedicated tool, not just standard resize.
    • Add selective grain/texture back in so it doesn’t look airbrushed or fake.
    • Output test crops and print them at actual size before approving.
  • If you want high-res AI lifestyle imagery that feels more real:

    • Start with a wider composition so you are not over-cropping.
    • Generate multiple variations and choose the most natural anatomy and textures.
    • Use image-to-image or inpainting to fix weak areas.
    • Upscale in stages rather than one giant jump.
    • Retouch details like eyes, hands, wheels, seams, shadows.
    • Add realistic print sharpening at the end, not before.
  • Important distinction:

    • AI is weakest when it must render:
      • your exact stroller product accurately
      • branded hardware details
      • exact mechanics of transformation
    • AI is stronger when it renders:
      • a family scene
      • outdoor setting
      • mood image
      • background context
    • For your POS, the hero stroller should probably be real/product-render accurate, not pure AI.
  • For your current design specifically:

    • Those circular photos are probably acting as “safe zones” because small crops make flaws less noticeable.
    • If you want larger lifestyle visuals, you likely need:
      • better source generation
      • proper upscaling
      • manual retouch
      • or real photography instead of fully generated images
  • A practical quality rule:

    • Ask your lead to test a 10" x 10" or 12" x 12" section at final print size.
    • Print:
      • the original
      • the upscaled version
      • a retouched version
    • Then judge from intended retail distance, not from 6 inches away on a monitor.
  • What I would recommend strategically:

    • Don’t make the success of the POS depend on giant AI lifestyle photos.
    • Make the hero communication graphic-based:
      • large real product image
      • strong transform arrow/motion system
      • short headline
    • Then use one or two lifestyle images only as support.
    • That reduces risk and usually looks more premium.
  • A good middle-ground position to take with your design lead:

    • “You’re right that low-res AI gets fake fast in print. But we don’t need to avoid AI entirely — we need a better production workflow and we should use AI where it’s strongest.”
  • If you want a simple decision rule:

    • Use real photography or accurate render for:
      • hero product
      • transformation steps
      • close-up details
    • Use AI for:
      • supporting lifestyle moments
      • background scenes
      • mood-building imagery
    • Use vector/graphic design for:
      • arrows
      • transitions
      • structure
      • premium visual hierarchy

My short answer: she is right about the risk, but wrong if she’s treating that risk as a hard limit. High-quality print use of AI is possible; it just usually requires hybrid production, not one-click generation.

If you want, I can help you with either:

  • a print-ready AI image workflow you can hand to your design lead, or
  • exact specs for what image resolution you actually need for your POS dimensions.
당신

연구문제

We use an actual product photo to generate the lifestyle image around it. And then she retouches. But I think she thinks she must have 300 dpi. This will be very close viewing as well, because people can walk up to the POS directly and touch the product sitting on it.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

She probably does not need 300 ppi for the entire photographic area, even for close-view POS. For a shopper-facing display that people may approach closely, 300 ppi is a good ideal for small text and critical product detail, but for large-format lifestyle photography on a POS panel, 150–200 ppi at final size is often the practical target.

  • The first important distinction:

    • What she means is probably 300 ppi, not 300 dpi.
    • In design files, you’re usually talking about image resolution in pixels per inch.
    • The printer has its own dpi behavior, but that is not the same thing as the placed image needing to be 300 everywhere.
  • For your type of POS, a better rule is:

    • 300 ppi: small text, logos, icons, fine line art, barcodes, QR codes
    • 200–250 ppi: hero product photography if the shopper will inspect it closely
    • 150–200 ppi: large lifestyle imagery on a rigid POS panel
    • Below 150 ppi: can work for background-only areas, but riskier for close-view use
  • So if the shopper can walk right up to it:

    • I would not be casual and say “100 ppi is fine.”
    • But I also would not insist the whole thing must be 300 ppi.
    • A smart target is:
      • keep all vector elements as vector
      • keep the real stroller/product image as high-res as possible
      • aim for at least 150–200 ppi at final size for the AI-generated lifestyle portions
      • use 200+ ppi if a face or child is large and meant to be scrutinized
  • Why 300 ppi is often over-applied:

    • It comes from brochure/magazine standards.
    • POS and large-format print are different.
    • Once the panel gets larger, the required ppi often drops because the image is not read like a handheld piece.
    • Even when people stand close, they usually inspect the product first, not pore over the lifestyle background at nose distance.
  • In your workflow, this matters a lot:

    • Since you start with a real product photo and generate the environment around it, you do not need every part of the final image to have equal sharpness.
    • In fact, it can look more realistic if:
      • the stroller remains crisp
      • the background has natural depth falloff
      • less-critical areas are slightly softer
    • Real photography is not uniformly razor-sharp edge to edge either.
  • A more realistic quality standard for your team:

    • “Does it look convincing at intended viewing distance?”
    • Not:
      • “Does it hold up at 200% zoom on a Retina screen?”
  • Practical example:

    • If the visible photo area is 24" wide x 36" high:
      • at 300 ppi you’d need 7200 x 10800 px
      • at 200 ppi you’d need 4800 x 7200 px
      • at 150 ppi you’d need 3600 x 5400 px
    • 200 ppi is much more achievable while still being strong for retail.
  • Where she may still be right:

    • If the faces are large
    • If the child’s hands are prominent
    • If the AI-generated area includes fine stroller-adjacent edges or fabric transitions
    • If the print substrate is very smooth and high-quality, which can reveal flaws more clearly
    • In those cases, weak AI will absolutely start to look fake when enlarged
  • But that is a content-quality problem, not only a ppi problem.

    • A bad AI face at 300 ppi still looks bad.
    • A well-composited, well-retouched image at 180–220 ppi can look very good.
  • What I’d recommend as your internal standard:

    • Product: real photo, highest res available
    • Text/logo/arrows/icons: vector only
    • Lifestyle/support image:
      • 150–200 ppi minimum at final placed size
      • 200–250 ppi if faces are large or in the shopper’s main eyeline
    • Then test print before final approval
  • Best proof method:

    • Print a 1:1 crop of the most critical area, not a scaled-down letter-size proof.
    • Test the actual problem zones:
      • child’s face
      • hands
      • stroller edge where the AI environment meets the real product photo
      • any fabric texture
    • Pin that crop up and view it from:
      • 12 inches
      • 24 inches
      • 36 inches
    • That will settle the argument quickly.
  • If you want a strong compromise to propose to your lead:

    • “Let’s stop debating 300 ppi as a blanket rule. Let’s define critical zones and non-critical zones.”
    • For example:
      • critical zones = product, faces, top headline area
      • non-critical zones = soft background, environmental context, edge fade areas
  • For your POS specifically, I’d design around this reality:

    • Don’t depend on one huge AI lifestyle image as the hero.
    • Let the hero be:
      • the real stroller/product image
      • a big transform visual
      • short copy
    • Then use lifestyle imagery as a secondary proof point, where a little softness is less damaging.
  • One more useful production note:

    • If the image still feels “too smooth and fake,” the fix is not always more resolution.
    • Often the fix is:
      • restore micro-contrast
      • add natural texture/grain
      • fix edge halos
      • avoid over-smoothing skin
      • keep realistic shadow detail
    • Over-retouching is often what makes AI composites look synthetic.

My direct answer: for close-view POS, 300 ppi everywhere is usually stricter than necessary. A better print standard is 150–200 ppi for large photographic areas, 200+ ppi for important faces/product-adjacent detail, and vector for all text and graphics.

If you want, I can do one of two useful next steps:

  • calculate the exact minimum pixel dimensions you need once you give me the front-panel size, or
  • help you build a simple “critical zone resolution spec” you can hand to your design lead.
당신

연구문제

She just sent me these--one is 100% and one is 300%--and said it gets a little fuzzy. I'm so annoyed because to me, it's not bad at all. And she's making these decisions without even showing me or trying, even after I've told her that she needs to lead the AI on our team and she makes a decision like this that is so obviously overkill on protecting "quality". How can I respond to her. her and I have had this discussion many times and she is still so resistant

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Don’t respond by arguing about whether it “looks bad.” Respond by changing the decision standard. The real issue is not fuzziness at 300% zoom; it’s that she is rejecting options before testing them in the actual use case.

  • Based on what you showed:

    • At 300%, yes, it looks softer.
    • That is not surprising.
    • It does not look obviously unusable to me.
    • A 300% zoom is not the right approval standard for shopper-facing POS.
  • What you want to say, in substance:

    • I appreciate the quality concern.
    • But we cannot kill concepts based on enlarged screen inspection alone.
    • We need to review them at final placed size and, if needed, with a print test.
    • I need options brought forward, not pre-rejected.
  • A good response you can send:

    • “I understand the concern about softness, and I agree we should protect print quality. But 300% zoom is not the standard we should use to reject an image for POS. Please don’t eliminate concepts before showing them in context. I’d like us to evaluate this based on final placed size, intended viewing distance, and a 1:1 test crop print of the most sensitive area. If it fails that test, we move on. If it passes, we use it. Going forward, please bring AI options forward with risks noted rather than ruling them out before review.”
  • If you want it a little firmer:

    • “I need us to stop using extreme zoom as the decision-maker. For this POS, the approval standard is final-use performance, not whether a face gets a little soft at 300% on screen. Please show me the option in layout and, if needed, with a print test before deciding it’s unusable.”
  • If the pattern keeps repeating, set a process:

    • No AI route gets rejected without:
      • final placed-size mockup
      • 1:1 crop of the most critical area
      • print proof if it’s close
    • Review standard:
      • actual size in layout
      • 18–36 inch viewing distance
      • only critical zones judged tightly
    • Decision rule:
      • if acceptable in print/context, it stays in consideration
      • if not, it gets replaced
  • This is the key management point:

    • She is treating “possible imperfection” as “automatic no.”
    • What you need from her is:
      • informed experimentation
      • evidence-based recommendation
      • not unilateral filtering
  • I would also say this once, clearly:

    • “Your job here is not just to protect against defects; it’s to help us find workable AI solutions. I need you to test and present, not default to no.”
  • If you want to reduce defensiveness, avoid:

    • “You’re being resistant.”
    • “This is overkill.”
    • “Other people can do it.”
    • Those are true-feeling statements, but they usually make people dig in harder.
  • Better framing:

    • “Let’s use a shared approval method.”
    • “Let’s test before rejecting.”
    • “Let’s distinguish critical quality issues from zoom-level softness.”
  • A very practical next message could be:

    • “Please place this image at final size in the POS layout and send me:
      • the full layout view,
      • a 100% crop at final placed size,
      • and a 1:1 print crop of the child’s face.
        Then we’ll decide based on real use, not 300% zoom.”
  • If you need one sentence that is both calm and firm:

    • “I’m aligned on quality, but I’m not aligned on rejecting AI imagery based on 300% screen zoom without a final-size layout review and print test.”

Honestly, the strongest move here is to stop debating taste and create a rule. Once the rule is “test in context before rejecting,” her resistance has less room to control the outcome.

If you want, I can draft:

  • a polished Slack message,
  • a firmer email,
  • or a short AI-review SOP you can put in place for your team.
당신

연구문제

Make this a bit nicer:

As we’ve talked about lots over the past several months, people (not least of whom, Pierre!!!) are asking and pushing for us to master printable AI. And it seems we're not there yet, even though other brands are..... I need us to stop using extreme zoom as the decision-maker. For this POS, the approval standard is final-use performance, not whether a face gets a little soft at 300% on screen. Please show me the option in layout and, if needed, with a print test before deciding it’s unusable.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Here’s a nicer, more collaborative version that still keeps the point clear:

As we’ve discussed over the past several months, there’s a growing expectation — including from Pierre — that we build real capability around printable AI. I know we’re still refining that process, but I don’t think we should rule options out based on extreme zoom views alone, especially when other brands are clearly finding ways to make this work.

For this POS, I’d like us to evaluate imagery based on how it performs in its actual end use: in layout, at final size, and if needed, with a print test. A face looking a little soft at 300% on screen shouldn’t automatically disqualify an option. Please show me the image in context before deciding it isn’t usable.

If you want, I can also give you:

  • a softer version
  • a firmer manager version
  • or a super-short Slack version.
당신

연구문제

That's good. But please add: And it's getting a little frustrating that we keep talking about this, but your outlook is not changing in your adoption of it. I get you're trying different things and it's all time-sensitive, but at some point we can't just default to not usable. I really need you to embrace AI.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Absolutely — here’s a version that adds that point but keeps it constructive and professional:

As we’ve discussed over the past several months, there’s a growing expectation — including from Pierre — that we build real capability around printable AI. I know we’re still refining that process, but I don’t think we should rule options out based on extreme zoom views alone, especially when other brands are clearly finding ways to make this work.

For this POS, I’d like us to evaluate imagery based on how it performs in its actual end use: in layout, at final size, and, if needed, with a print test. A face looking a little soft at 300% on screen shouldn’t automatically disqualify an option. Please show me the image in context before deciding it isn’t usable.

I’ll be honest: it’s starting to feel frustrating that we’ve had this conversation a number of times, but the approach to AI still seems very cautious and quick to default to “not usable.” I do understand that you’re trying different things and that the timelines are tight. But at some point, we need to move beyond defaulting to no and instead figure out how to make it work when the quality is close. I really need you to lean into AI more fully and help lead that adoption for the team.

If you want, I can also tighten this into:

  • a more diplomatic version
  • a firmer manager-to-direct-report version
  • or a shorter Slack message.
당신

연구문제

OK I'll use that, but now please give me the prompt for nano banana, so I can use what it produces when I send her the feedback

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Yes — the best prompt is one that tells Nano Banana exactly what problem to solve: make the transformability obvious fast, keep the front bottom clear, and create a premium retail-ready concept rather than a generic ad.

  • Here’s a strong master prompt you can use:

Create a premium retail POS design concept for Globber’s stroller-to-ride-on product. The display consists of a vertical backboard and a base platform. The key message is that the product transforms from stroller mode into ride-on mode, and that transformation must be obvious to shoppers in under 2 seconds from several feet away.

Design the front of the POS so that the upper portion clearly communicates the 2-in-1 transformation using large product visuals, a bold directional cue, and minimal copy. Keep the bottom 35–40% of the front panel mostly free of important graphics or text because the real product will physically cover that area. The design should feel premium, modern, minimal, and retail-ready — not cluttered, childish, or overly decorative.

Use one strong hero transformation story instead of many small images. Show stroller mode and ride-on mode clearly, ideally with a left-to-right transition, split-screen concept, or dynamic motion path. Use clean white space and restrained use of Globber’s cyan accent color for arrows, labels, or motion graphics. Avoid small floating circles, busy layouts, or too many separate callouts.

For the back of the POS, create a simple 3-step transformation explanation with clean visual sequencing and 2–3 supporting benefit callouts. Include space for a QR code to a demo video.

Create 3 distinct creative directions:

  1. Premium split-screen transformation concept
  2. Dynamic motion-path concept
  3. Minimal before-and-after concept

Make the output look like a real retail display design presentation, with polished composition, strong hierarchy, and believable print-ready graphics.

  • If you want a version that stays closer to your current format, use this:

Redesign this existing Globber POS format to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation more innovative and immediately understandable. Keep the overall structure of a vertical back panel with a rectangular base platform. Improve the front by simplifying the composition, enlarging the product imagery, reducing small lifestyle elements, and making the transformation the main visual story. Keep the lower portion of the front panel clear because the physical product blocks that area. The style should feel clean, premium, modern, and bold, with strong retail visibility from a distance. On the back panel, show a simple and elegant 3-step transformation sequence with minimal copy and clear benefit communication.

  • If you want Nano Banana to generate more visually ambitious concepts, use this:

Design an innovative retail POS for a transformable stroller that becomes a ride-on. The display should feel surprising, smart, and highly legible in-store. Focus on one big transformation idea, not multiple small images. Show the two modes in a dramatic and elegant way using either a morph visual, split identity, or a bold motion graphic. Keep the bottom of the front panel intentionally open because the actual product covers that area. Use premium typography, modern white space, subtle brand graphics, and a restrained cyan accent. The design should instantly communicate: stroller mode to ride-on mode. Make it feel like a high-end juvenile product display in a major retailer.

  • If you also want it to generate supporting lifestyle imagery around the real product photo, add this block:

Use the actual product photo as the hero and build a realistic lifestyle environment around it. Keep the stroller geometry accurate and preserve the real product details. The surrounding scene should feel natural, premium, and believable for print. Avoid overly smoothed skin, fake anatomy, distorted hands, or artificial textures. Prioritize realistic lighting, natural depth of field, and clean retouchable edges.

  • If you want headline ideas included in the output, add:

Include short retail headline options such as:

  • Stroll. Flip. Ride.

  • From Stroller to Ride-On

  • 2-in-1 for Growing Kids

  • One Ride, Two Modes

  • Transforms in Seconds

  • Best extra instruction to improve results:

    • Ask for concept boards, not just one final image.
    • Example:
      • Show 3 different front-panel concepts and 2 back-panel concepts.
      • Include layout hierarchy, headline placement, product placement, and motion-graphic recommendations.
  • If you want one short version you can paste quickly, use this:

Create 3 innovative retail POS concepts for Globber’s stroller-to-ride-on product. The display has a vertical backboard and a base platform. The front must instantly communicate that the product transforms from stroller mode to ride-on mode. Use a premium, minimal, retail-ready style with strong hierarchy and clean white space. Keep the bottom 35–40% of the front panel mostly empty because the real product covers that area. Make the upper panel the hero area with large product visuals, a bold transformation cue, and very short copy. Avoid clutter, scattered images, or too many small lifestyle bubbles. The back should show a clean 3-step transformation sequence plus 2–3 benefits and a QR code area. Create 3 distinct directions: split-screen, motion-path, and minimal before/after.

  • One smart tip:
    • If Nano Banana tends to get too generic, add:
      • “Do not design this like a poster ad. Design it like an in-store structural POS graphic system with clear hierarchy and product obstruction considered.”

If you want, I can also give you:

  • a prompt specifically for front only,
  • a prompt specifically for the back panel,
  • or a prompt specifically for generating larger, more believable lifestyle images around your real product photo.
당신

연구문제

Redesign this existing Globber POS format (shared in the files POS front and POS back attached) to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation more innovative and immediately understandable. Keep the overall structure of a vertical back panel with a rectangular base platform. Improve the front by simplifying the composition, enlarging the imagery, and making the transformation the main visual story. Keep the lower portion of the front panel clear because the physical product blocks that area. The style should feel clean, premium, modern, and bold, with strong retail visibility from a distance. On the back panel, show a simple and elegant 2-step transformation sequence with minimal copy and clear benefit communication.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

AI generated image

당신

연구문제

Redesign this existing Globber POS format (shared in the files POS front and POS back attached) to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation more innovative and immediately understandable. Keep the overall structure of a vertical back panel with a rectangular base platform. Improve the front by simplifying the composition, enlarging the imagery with lifestyle imagery (not just kids in products on a white background), and making the transformation the main visual story. Keep the lower portion of the front panel completely clear because the physical product totally blocks that area. The style should feel clean, premium, modern, and bold, with strong retail visibility from a distance. On the back panel, show a simple and elegant 2-step transformation sequence with minimal copy and clear benefit communication. Create an image that shows both the front and rear panels

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

AI generated image

당신

연구문제

make this more casual:

For the printable AI, As we’ve discussed over the past several months, there’s a growing expectation — including from Pierre — that we build real capability around printable AI. I know we’re still refining that process, but I don’t think we should rule options out based on extreme zoom views alone, especially when other brands are clearly finding ways to make this work.

For this POS, I’d like us to evaluate imagery based on how it performs in its actual end use: in layout, at final size, and, if needed, with a print test. A face looking a little soft at 300% on screen shouldn’t automatically disqualify an option. Please show me the image in context before deciding it isn’t usable.

I’ll be honest: it’s starting to feel frustrating that we’ve had this conversation a number of times, but the approach to AI still seems very cautious and quick to default to “not usable.” I do understand that you’re trying different things and that the timelines are tight. But at some point, we need to move beyond defaulting to no and instead figure out how to make it work when the quality is close. I really need you to lean into AI more fully and help lead that adoption for the team.

For the brainstorming, we really need to use AI to help us concept and ideate. I can also do more of that so we have a clear brief and direction forward rather than you trying to design blind.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Here’s a more casual version that still gets the point across clearly:

For printable AI, I just want to reiterate something we’ve talked about a lot over the past few months: there’s a growing expectation — including from Pierre — that we get stronger at using AI for print. I know we’re still figuring out the best workflow, but I don’t think we should rule things out based only on extreme zoom views, especially when other brands are clearly finding ways to make it work.

For this POS, I’d really like us to judge the imagery based on how it works in the real use case: in layout, at final size, and, if needed, with a print test. If a face gets a little soft at 300% on screen, that alone shouldn’t automatically make it unusable. I’d just like to see it in context before we decide it won’t work.

I’ll be honest — it’s getting a little frustrating that we’ve talked about this a number of times, but the mindset around AI still feels pretty cautious and quick to go to “not usable.” I do get that you’re trying different things and that timing is tight. But at some point, we can’t keep defaulting to no when something is close — we need to figure out how to make it work. I really need you to lean into AI more and help lead that adoption for the team.

And on the brainstorming side, I think we really need to be using AI more to help with concepting and ideation too. I’m happy to do more of that upfront as well, so we can go in with a clearer brief and stronger direction instead of you having to design from scratch or too blindly.

If you want, I can also make this:

  • softer and more collaborative
  • shorter for Slack
  • or a little firmer without sounding harsh
당신

연구문제

shorter for Teams. Maybe soften the third paragraph. She is my direct report but she doesn't do well with harsh. She internalises and gets upset. But I do need to tell her the truth and get her motivated for AI

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Here’s a shorter, softer Teams version that still makes the point:

For printable AI, I just want to reiterate that there’s a growing expectation — including from Pierre — that we build stronger capability here. I know we’re still figuring out the right workflow, but I don’t think we should rule options out based only on extreme zoom views, especially when other brands are making this work.

For this POS, I’d like us to judge the imagery based on how it performs in the real use case: in layout, at final size, and, if needed, with a print test. A face looking a little soft at 300% on screen shouldn’t automatically make it unusable — I’d like to see it in context first.

I know you’re being thoughtful about quality, and I appreciate that. At the same time, I’d really like us to lean in more on AI and focus on finding workable solutions when something is close, rather than defaulting to no too quickly. I need your help leading that for the team.

For brainstorming too, I think we should be using AI more to help with concepting and ideation. I’m happy to help more upfront so we have a clearer brief and direction to work from.

If you want, I can also make this:

  • even shorter and more casual
  • warmer/more encouraging
  • or more manager-like but still gentle
당신

연구문제

Paraphgraph 3 is good, but I also want to say that we have talked about this before and it's now becoming more urgent and expected

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Here’s a revised Teams version with that added in, while keeping it gentle:

For printable AI, I just want to reiterate that there’s a growing expectation — including from Pierre — that we build stronger capability here. I know we’re still figuring out the right workflow, but I don’t think we should rule options out based only on extreme zoom views, especially when other brands are making this work.

For this POS, I’d like us to judge the imagery based on how it performs in the real use case: in layout, at final size, and, if needed, with a print test. A face looking a little soft at 300% on screen shouldn’t automatically make it unusable — I’d like to see it in context first.

I know we’ve talked about this before, but it’s becoming more urgent now and more expected of us. I really appreciate that you care about quality, and that’s important. At the same time, I’d like us to lean in more on AI and focus on finding workable solutions when something is close, rather than defaulting to no too quickly. I need your help leading that for the team.

For brainstorming too, I think we should be using AI more to help with concepting and ideation. I’m happy to help more upfront so we have a clearer brief and direction to work from.

If you want, I can also make paragraph 3:

  • a little firmer
  • a little warmer
  • or even shorter for Teams.
당신

연구문제

Want it short and casual and human written. No em-dashes:

I'm just brainstorming ideas through AI given Stoney's feedback. But there are two things:

Using AI to generate printable images
Using AI to generate ideas

We need to be able to do both.

For printable, I just want to reiterate that there’s a growing expectation (especially from Pierre) that we build stronger capability here. I know we’re still figuring out the right workflow, but I don’t think we should rule options out based only on extreme zoom views.

A face looking a little soft at 300% on screen shouldn’t automatically make it unusable, you know what I mean? Of course, for this POS, we'd like the images to be as big as possible, as discussed. So going forward, I’d like to see images in context first (in layout, at final size) before we say no.

I know we’ve talked about this before, but it’s becoming more urgent now and more expected of us. I really appreciate that you care about quality, and that’s important. At the same time, I’d like us to lean in more on AI and focus on finding workable solutions when something is close, rather than defaulting to no too quickly. I need your help leading that for the team.

For brainstorming too, I think we should be using AI more to help with concepting and ideation. I’m happy to help more upfront so we have a clearer brief and direction to work from.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Sure, here’s a shorter, more casual version:

I’m just using AI to brainstorm based on Stoney’s feedback, but there are really two separate things here: using AI to create printable images, and using AI to generate ideas. We need to be able to do both.

On the printable side, I just want to reiterate that there’s a growing expectation, especially from Pierre, that we get stronger here. I know we’re still working out the right process, but I don’t think we should rule things out just based on extreme zoom views.

If a face looks a little soft at 300% on screen, that doesn’t automatically make it unusable. For this POS, we want the images as large as possible, like we discussed, so I’d like us to review them in context first, in layout and at final size, before we decide no.

I know we’ve talked about this before, but it’s becoming more urgent now and more expected of us. I really appreciate that you care about quality, but I need us to lean in more on AI and focus on finding workable solutions when something is close, instead of defaulting to no too quickly. I need your help leading that for the team.

And for brainstorming too, I think we should be using AI more for concepting and ideation. I’m happy to help more upfront so we have a clearer brief and direction to work from.

If you want, I can make this even shorter and more Teams-y.

당신

연구문제

Well I’m just using AI to brainstorm based on Stoney’s feedback, but there are two separate things: using AI to create printable images and using AI to generate ideas. We need to be able to do both.

On the printable side, I just want to reiterate what we’ve discussed several times that there’s a growing expectation, especially from Pierre, that we get stronger here. I know we’re still working out the right process, but I don’t think we should rule things out just based on extreme zoom views. If a face looks a little soft at 300% on screen, that shouldn't automatically make it unusable, you know what I mean?

I really appreciate that you care about quality, but like we discussed, please let go a little bit of the fear, instead of defaulting to no too quickly. I need your help leading that for the team. And let's always review images in context first, in layout and at final size, before we decide no.

For this POS, we wanted the images as large as possible for as much impact as possible, so I get Stoney’s feedback TBH.

And for brainstorming too, I think we should be using AI more for concepting and ideation. I’m happy to help more upfront so we have a clearer brief and direction to work from.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Here’s a cleaner, more natural version that keeps your tone:

Well, I’m just using AI to brainstorm based on Stoney’s feedback, but there are really two separate things here: using AI to create printable images, and using AI to generate ideas. We need to be able to do both.

On the printable side, I just want to reiterate what we’ve talked about a few times now: there’s a growing expectation, especially from Pierre, that we get stronger here. I know we’re still figuring out the right process, but I don’t think we should rule things out based only on extreme zoom views. If a face looks a little soft at 300% on screen, that shouldn’t automatically make it unusable, if you know what I mean.

I really appreciate that you care about quality, but as we’ve discussed, I need us to loosen up a bit on the hesitation and not default to no too quickly. I need your help leading that for the team. Let’s make sure we’re always reviewing images in context first, in layout and at final size, before deciding something won’t work.

For this POS, we wanted the images to be as large and impactful as possible, so I do understand Stoney’s feedback, to be honest.

And on the brainstorming side too, I think we should be using AI more for concepting and ideation. I’m happy to help more upfront so we have a clearer brief and direction to work from.

If you want, I can also make this:

  • a tiny bit softer
  • a bit more manager-like
  • or even shorter for Teams chat.
당신

연구문제

Redesign this existing Globber POS format (shared in the files POS front and POS back attached) to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation more innovative and immediately understandable. You can use the lifestyle images attached (stroller and rider). Keep the overall structure of a vertical back panel with a rectangular base platform. Improve the front by simplifying the composition, enlarging the imagery with lifestyle imagery (not just kids in products on a white background), and making the transformation the main visual story. Keep the lower half of the front panel clean apart from perhaps a light design element because the physical product totally blocks that area. The style should feel clean, premium, modern, and bold, with strong retail visibility from a distance. On the back panel, show a simple and elegant 2-step transformation sequence with minimal copy and clear benefit communication. Create an image that shows both the front and rear panels

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

Here’s a cleaner prompt you can paste into Nano Banana:

Redesign the existing Globber POS format shown in the reference images. Keep the same overall structure: one vertical back panel and one rectangular base platform.

The goal is to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation feel innovative, premium, and instantly understandable from a distance. The design should communicate the transformation in a very simple, visual way, with strong retail impact and minimal clutter.

Use the attached lifestyle images for the stroller mode and rider mode. The front panel should use large, premium lifestyle imagery rather than small circular cutouts or isolated product shots on white. Make the transformation the hero story by clearly showing stroller mode transitioning into ride-on mode. Use a bold but elegant visual cue such as a directional arrow, split composition, or motion path to connect the two modes.

Keep the lower half of the front panel mostly clean because the physical product will block that area in-store. Only allow a very light background graphic or subtle brand element in that lower area. Concentrate the main communication in the upper half of the front panel.

The design style should feel clean, modern, premium, bold, and retail-ready. It should be easy to understand in 2 seconds from several feet away. Use strong hierarchy, restrained typography, and simple benefit messaging. Avoid clutter, too many callouts, busy layouts, small bubbles, or a white-background catalog look.

For the back panel, create a simple and elegant 2-step transformation story with minimal copy. Show how the product changes from stroller to ride-on in a very clear visual sequence. Include concise benefit communication such as 2-in-1, transforms in seconds, or grows with your child. Keep the back clean and premium.

Create one presentation image that shows both the front and rear panel designs of the POS structure in the same view or as a polished retail concept board. Make it look like a realistic, professional in-store display proposal.

If you want, add this at the end to get better output:

Use the Globber brand look and colors from the reference images, especially the clean white base and cyan accent. Preserve the product’s real proportions and geometry. Make the design feel like a real printed retail POS, not a digital ad poster.

You can also use this slightly firmer version if Nano Banana tends to get too loose:

Important constraints:

  • Keep the POS structure exactly as shown in the reference
  • Front panel upper half = main communication zone
  • Front panel lower half = mostly empty because product blocks it
  • Use attached lifestyle images, enlarged and integrated cleanly
  • Make stroller-to-ride-on transformation the main visual story
  • No small circular lifestyle bubbles
  • No busy collage layout
  • No childish or overly playful design
  • Output should show both front and back panel concepts

If you want, I can also turn this into:

  • a shorter prompt optimized for image models
  • a more art-directed prompt with exact headline suggestions
  • or 3 separate prompts for 3 different design directions.
당신

연구문제

Redesign the existing Globber POS format shown in the reference images. Keep the same overall structure: one vertical back panel and one rectangular base platform.

The goal is to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation feel innovative, premium, and instantly understandable from a distance. The design should communicate the transformation in a very simple, visual way, with strong retail impact and minimal clutter.

Use the attached lifestyle images for the stroller mode and rider mode. The front panel should use large, premium lifestyle imagery rather than small circular cutouts or isolated product shots on white. Make the transformation the hero story by clearly showing stroller mode transitioning into ride-on mode. Use a bold but elegant visual cue such as a directional arrow, split composition, or motion path to connect the two modes.

Keep the lower half of the front panel mostly clean because the physical product will block that area in-store. Only allow a very light background graphic or subtle brand element in that lower area. Concentrate the main communication in the upper half of the front panel.

The design style should feel clean, modern, premium, bold, and retail-ready. It should be easy to understand in 2 seconds from several feet away. Use strong hierarchy, restrained typography, and simple benefit messaging. Avoid clutter, too many callouts, busy layouts, small bubbles, or a white-background catalog look.

For the back panel, create a simple and elegant 2-step transformation story with minimal copy. Show how the product changes from stroller to ride-on in a very clear visual sequence. Include concise benefit communication such as 2-in-1, transforms in seconds, or grows with your child. Keep the back clean and premium.

Create one presentation image that shows both the front and rear panel designs of the POS structure in the same view or as a polished retail concept board. Make it look like a realistic, professional in-store display proposal.

Use the Globber brand look and colors from the reference images, especially the clean white base and cyan accent. Preserve the product’s real proportions and geometry. Make the design feel like a real printed retail POS, not a digital ad poster.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

AI generated image

당신

연구문제

Redesign the existing Globber POS format shown in the reference images. Keep the same overall structure: one vertical back panel and one rectangular base platform.

The goal is to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation feel innovative, premium, and instantly understandable from a distance. The design should communicate the transformation in a very simple, visual way, with strong retail impact and minimal clutter.

Use the attached lifestyle images for the stroller mode and rider mode. The front panel should use large, premium lifestyle imagery rather than small circular cutouts or isolated product shots on white. Make the transformation the hero story by clearly showing stroller mode transitioning into ride-on mode. Use a bold but elegant visual cue such as a directional arrow, split composition, or motion path to connect the two modes.

Keep the lower half of the front panel mostly clean because the physical product will block that area in-store. Only allow a very light background graphic or subtle brand element in that lower area. Concentrate the main communication in the upper half of the front panel.

The design style should feel clean, modern, premium, bold, and retail-ready. It should be easy to understand in 2 seconds from several feet away. Use strong hierarchy, restrained typography, and simple benefit messaging. Avoid clutter, too many callouts, busy layouts, small bubbles, or a white-background catalog look.

For the back panel, create a simple and elegant 2-step transformation story with minimal copy. Show how the product changes from stroller to ride-on in a very clear visual sequence. Include concise benefit communication such as 2-in-1, transforms in seconds, or grows with your child. Keep the back clean and premium.

Create one presentation image that shows both the front and rear panel designs of the POS structure in the same view or as a polished retail concept board. Make it look like a realistic, professional in-store display proposal.

Use the Globber brand look and colors from the reference images, especially the clean white base and cyan accent. Preserve the product’s real proportions and geometry. Make the design feel like a real printed retail POS, not a digital ad poster.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

AI generated image

당신

연구문제

Redesign the existing Globber POS format shown in the reference images. Keep the same overall structure: one vertical back panel and one rectangular base platform.

The goal is to make the stroller-to-ride-on transformation feel innovative, premium, and instantly understandable from a distance. The design should communicate the transformation in a very simple, visual way, with strong retail impact and minimal clutter.

Use the attached lifestyle images for the stroller mode and rider mode. The front panel should use large, premium lifestyle imagery rather than small circular cutouts or isolated product shots on white. Make the transformation the hero story by clearly showing stroller mode transitioning into ride-on mode. Use a bold but elegant visual cue such as a directional arrow, split composition, or motion path to connect the two modes.

Keep the lower half of the front panel mostly clean because the physical product will block that area in-store. Only allow a very light background graphic or subtle brand element in that lower area. Concentrate the main communication in the upper half of the front panel.

The design style should feel clean, modern, premium, bold, and retail-ready. It should be easy to understand in 2 seconds from several feet away. Use strong hierarchy, restrained typography, and simple benefit messaging. Avoid clutter, too many callouts, busy layouts, small bubbles, or a white-background catalog look.

For the back panel, create a simple and elegant 2-step transformation story with minimal copy. Show how the product changes from stroller to ride-on in a very clear visual sequence. Include concise benefit communication such as 2-in-1, transforms in seconds, or grows with your child. Keep the back clean and premium.

Create one presentation image that shows both the front and rear panel designs of the POS structure in the same view or as a polished retail concept board. Make it look like a realistic, professional in-store display proposal.

Studio Global AI

인용 답변

AI generated image