What counts as a “character”
- People (e.g., a red-haired woman in a space suit)
- Mascots (e.g., a cartoon beaver used across marketing visuals)
- Objects or products (e.g., the same pair of sunglasses shown in multiple lifestyle settings)
Techniques for maintaining consistency
- Use a detailed prompt: Start with a prompt that clearly defines your subject’s distinguishing traits. For example:
“Young woman with curly red hair, freckles, and an astronaut suit.”
This establishes a verbal template for regenerating or varying the character later.
Maintain a consistent style: Apply the same style (or saved custom style) across all related images. Recraft interprets characters through the lens of visual style—keeping it consistent reduces unwanted shifts in appearance. - Use frames to evolve or isolate specific traits: Insert the character into a Frame to edit selected parts—such as changing clothes, expressions, or poses—without altering the full image. This is especially useful for storytelling or iterative design.
- Use reference images to preserve likeness: Add a previously generated or uploaded image of your subject to the canvas and set it as a visual reference. Recraft will use this context to influence how new images are generated, helping preserve identity and structure.
- Use external models for remixing or variation: You can attach one or more images (of a person, object, or mascot) to a prompt using the external model option. For example:
- Combine two characters or items into a single scene.
- Generate style or activity variations, such as:
“Make my selfie in the style of The Simpsons.”
“Make me laughing.”
“Make me riding a bike.”