Overview
This Mira image prompt guide brings together the most useful habits for writing cleaner visual prompts, then adapts them for Mira usage in Miraga. The goal is to give you a practical prompting method for portraits, products, posters, UI mockups, editing tasks, and reference-image generation.
The main lesson is simple: Mira usually performs better with clean natural-language instructions than with keyword spam. Describe what should appear, how it should feel, and what must stay consistent.
Use Mira as the Base Model
All examples in this guide are written for the standard mira image workflow in Miraga. If you have used other image generation models before, you can still apply many of the same prompt-writing habits here, but the templates below are meant for Mira usage.
Core Formula
subject + action or state + environment + style + lighting + composition + output purpose + constraints
If you only remember one thing, remember this: define the visible subject first, then shape the scene with style, light, framing, and purpose.
Best Practices
- Use natural language: write a short visual sentence instead of stacking disconnected tags.
- Name the use case: say whether the output is a poster, social ad, product shot, UI mockup, or editorial illustration.
- Be precise about style: choose clear style language such as studio product photography, soft anime illustration, brutalist web UI, or painterly storybook.
- Quote literal text: if the image must render words, place the words in quotation marks.
- For edits, say what changes and what stays: this is critical for stable image editing.
Text to Image Templates
Portrait
A confident fashion portrait of a young woman standing under a transparent umbrella on a tree-lined street after rain, soft overcast daylight, cinematic skin tone, shallow depth of field, editorial photography, clean background separation.
Product Shot
A premium wireless headset floating above a matte black pedestal, soft studio rim lighting, sharp reflections on the metal edge, luxury technology ad, minimal composition, dark gradient background, realistic product photography.
Poster With Text
Create a launch poster for a futuristic AI creator tool. Large title text: "MIRAGA". Subtitle text: "Create Better Visual Stories". Bold modern typography, high-contrast blue and violet glow, premium SaaS campaign aesthetic.
UI Mockup
Design a high-fidelity web dashboard for an AI media platform, dark SaaS interface, left navigation, analytics cards, task table, image generation panel, clean enterprise UI, realistic product design presentation.
Editing Prompts
When editing, Mira needs direct instructions. Avoid vague pronouns like “change it” or “make that better”.
- Good: “Replace the red handbag with a silver metallic handbag, keep the model pose and background unchanged.”
- Good: “Remove the hat, keep hairstyle, facial expression, and outfit unchanged.”
- Poor: “Change it to something cooler.”
Reference Image Prompting
Reference images work best when you split the prompt into two parts: what to preserve from the input, and what new scene to generate.
Use the character identity from image 1. Generate a collectible figurine version of the same character on a desk, realistic material detail, branded packaging box in the background, indoor cinematic product photography, keep the original character color palette.
- Identity reference: preserve face, hair, clothing silhouette, or mascot shape.
- Style reference: preserve illustration style, line quality, palette, or material feeling.
- Layout reference: preserve placement, object relationship, or UI block structure.
Multi-Image Workflows
If you provide multiple images, be explicit about the role of each one.
Use image 1 for the character identity, image 2 for the jacket design, and image 3 for the lighting mood. Generate a clean studio portrait with the character from image 1 wearing the jacket from image 2 under the cool blue spotlight style of image 3.
This is much more reliable than uploading several images and assuming the model will guess your intention.
Text Rendering Tips
- Put required copy in quotes: for example "Summer Drop 2026".
- Keep the amount of text limited: short, important text usually renders better than dense paragraphs.
- State the layout: headline at top, logo centered, subtitle beneath, and so on.
What To Avoid
- Keyword spam: masterpiece, ultra-detailed, best quality repeated five times adds less value than scene clarity.
- Ambiguous subjects: if there are multiple people or objects, specify which one changes.
- Missing output intent: poster, UI, product ad, editorial photo, and children’s illustration all want different prompting.
- Ignoring what should stay fixed: especially in editing and reference-image tasks.
Final Recommendation
Use Mira prompts like a visual brief, not a bag of keywords. State the subject, the scene, the style, the purpose, and the constraints in one coherent instruction. For edits and references, always separate what should change from what must remain stable. That alone improves a large share of image results in Miraga.