11,000+ high-quality Nano Banana Pro image prompts (how to reuse them)
“11k prompts” sounds amazing—until you try to use them. Most people hit the same two problems: you can’t finish browsing, and copy‑paste isn’t stable. The fix is simple: turn raw prompt entries into reusable templates, and run a consistent selection + iteration workflow.

1) Three selection rules (save 80% of your time)
When you browse a large prompt library, keep only prompts that meet all three:
- Reusable structure: clear subject, scene, style, composition, specs, constraints
- Verifiable output: preview images or examples you can judge quickly
- Parameterizable: easy placeholders (subject/style/background/colors/ratio)
2) Organize prompts by deliverables (not by “style words”)
If you want a library that you can search under time pressure, categorize by what you ship:
- E‑commerce: hero images, selling‑point cards, scene posters, long mobile pages
- Brand & marketing: KV posters, variations, consistent palettes
- Content: covers, storyboards, comic grids, character sheets
- Information design: infographics, flows, labeled diagrams
This makes “nanobanana prompts / nanobanana tutorial / nanobanana entry” searches land on usable workflows, not vague inspiration.
3) Rewrite prompts into production specs
Most “bad prompts” are heavy on adjectives and light on constraints. Fix them by adding:
- Specs: ratio, resolution, text allowed or not
- Constraints: logo/copy/proportions that must remain unchanged
- Hierarchy: layout zones (title / hero / features / footnote)
Wrap any copied prompt with this “spec layer”:
Generate a [deliverable] while keeping [non‑negotiables] unchanged.
Strictly follow: composition [..], style [..], lighting [..], materials [..].
Specs: [aspect ratio], [resolution].
Text (if needed): must display exactly “[copy]”, with [font vibe] at [position].
Avoid: [unwanted elements].
4) Parameterize: turn 1 prompt into 30
The real power is not copying one prompt—it’s scaling it.
| Placeholder | Replace with | Best for |
|---|---|---|
[product] | category/model/value prop | e‑commerce |
[audience] | persona + pain point | ads/landing visuals |
[style] | studio/3D/illustration | series consistency |
[ratio] | 1:1, 4:5, 16:9, 8:1 | multi‑platform |
[palette] | brand colors | brand systems |
5) From Pro prompts to nanobanana2
Most skeletons transfer to nanobanana2. If results drift:
- Replace vague words with executable specs
- Split the workflow: layout first, micro‑copy second
6) Summary
A large library becomes useful only after you filter and template it. Once you build your own skeleton set, iterating with nanobanana2 becomes fast, predictable, and scalable.