4.2 KiB
Krea2 Prompt Guide
This document records prompt rules discovered from actual SxCP generator outputs tested in Krea2. It is not a generic prompt cookbook. Add a rule only when an A/B image comparison shows that the wording improves or breaks Krea2 behavior.
Core Rule
Krea2 responds best when the prompt gives one clear visual hierarchy:
- subject/cast descriptor,
- action or pose,
- clothing state,
- location,
- camera/layout,
- expression,
- composition/crop,
- style.
Avoid letting two sections describe incompatible camera or framing intents.
Prompt Output Contract
sxcp_eval_outmust contain only the prompt being tested.- Analysis, scoring, and generator notes belong in chat or
sxcp_eval_log. - Keep one experiment variable per cycle when possible.
- Lock seed, character, location, and camera when testing wording changes.
Camera And Composition
Orbit / Multiangle Camera
When Krea2 receives an orbit or multiangle camera, avoid selfie-specific wording unless the intended camera is actually a handheld or mirror selfie.
Works better:
lifestyle portrait framecreator portrait frameoutfit-check posewide environmental coworking camera layoutcamera placed several meters awayfull seated body from head to kneesroom depth surrounding the subject
Conflicting wording:
selfie framephone selfieholding the phonecreator-shot phone photohandheld camera realism
Observed result: selfie words pulled a back-right elevated wide shot into an arm-length selfie. Removing selfie terms made the image follow the rear-quarter view much better.
Wide Shots
Krea2 tends to keep attractive subjects large in frame. To get a real wide or environmental frame, be explicit about distance and visible environment.
Useful phrasing:
camera placed several meters away across the desk aislefull seated body from head to knees remains visiblenearby desk edge, laptop corner, repeated desk rows, and tall-window depth clearly readablewide environmental room framing
Avoid relying on wide shot alone.
Location Layout
Location-aware camera text works when it describes the room around the subject without stealing the foreground from the subject.
For coworking lounge:
- Keep
warm desks,laptop tables,glass partition seams,repeated desk rows,plants, andtall windows. - Mention foreground anchors only when the camera should actually see them.
- In POV, keep location anchors beside or behind the bodies, not in the lower foreground.
Clothing Continuity
When a softcore outfit is reused in a later branch, name what happens to actual outfit pieces instead of using generic fabric language.
Works better:
denim shorts are pulled aside or removed below the hipsbutton-down shirt tied at the waist and fitted bralette remain visible from the same outfit
Avoid generic fallback wording:
fabric slipping offpartly exposedoutfit pushed aside where needed
Use generic wording only when no source outfit exists.
POV
In POV prompts, the visible subject should still be established first. The POV participant is the camera viewpoint, not a normal visible cast member.
Works better:
- visible subject descriptor first,
- then POV action,
- then foreground hands/body/clothing cues.
For POV clothing, describe only visible body/clothing fragments:
foreground hands, hips, thighs, or lowered waistbandforeground hands, forearms, sleeves, or torso edge
Avoid:
- full third-person
Man A wears...phrasing for the POV participant, - making
the viewerthe first subject before the visible character is established.
Style
Style should describe rendering, not camera mechanics.
Use style presets to choose between:
- natural photo,
- creator/social-media photo,
- documentary/direct-flash photo,
- cinematic realism,
- illustration/comic.
If a controlled camera is active, avoid style suffixes that imply a conflicting
camera such as phone photo or handheld selfie.
Guide Update Format
When adding a new rule, include:
- observed prompt,
- observed image failure,
- edited prompt wording,
- image improvement or regression,
- generator path if known,
- final rule.