SEEDANCE 2.0 VIDEO GALLERY
Seedance 2.0 Prompt Gallery
Seedance 2.0 Prompt examples from real gallery clips—cinematic motion, pacing, and consistent scenes.
Explore nowBrowse reusable Banana 2 Prompt examples for creation and editing. Copy a prompt, tweak a few details, and generate consistent marketing visuals, product shots, characters, and editorial compositions.
Practical guidance for turning gallery examples into controllable, production-ready Banana 2 outputs.
A Banana 2 Prompt is a reusable text instruction that guides Banana 2 to create or edit an image with more predictable results. It usually includes the subject, scene, style, lighting, and framing—so you can repeat a look and generate variations quickly. You can treat each prompt like a template: keep the core direction, then swap a few details to produce a new version without losing consistency.
Choose a gallery example, copy the Banana 2 Prompt, and replace only the parts that should change—like the subject, product name, colors, setting, or mood. Generate a first draft, then refine with small, targeted edits (background, lighting, texture, text placement). This "iterate in steps" approach keeps results stable and helps you reach a publish-ready image faster than rewriting the whole prompt each time.
Yes. The easiest way is to keep the structure and composition cues, then customize the style line (e.g., editorial, cinematic, minimal studio, playful 3D) and a few visual constraints (lighting, lens/framing, materials). If you need consistency across a series, reuse the same "identity" descriptors (face/outfit/product materials/logo placement) and change one variable per iteration so the style stays coherent.
Small differences in settings and missing constraints can shift the output. Common causes include a different aspect ratio, fewer composition cues (e.g., "centered product", "waist-up portrait"), or changed lighting/style keywords. To match the gallery more closely, keep the core Banana 2 Prompt lines intact, use the same framing language, and add only 1–2 constraints to correct drift. If the example relies on editing, make sure you're using the same reference image flow rather than pure text-only generation.
Yes—gallery prompts are free to browse, copy, and adapt, including Nano Banana 2 Prompt-style examples. You only use credits when you actually generate or edit images. If you're testing ideas, start by copying a prompt, generating a quick draft, then refine with a couple of focused edits to avoid spending credits on wide, unpredictable changes.
We add new Banana 2 Prompt examples regularly to cover fresh styles, seasonal creatives, and common production needs like product shots, ads, and character variations. Nano Banana 2 Prompt examples are also updated as we collect patterns that iterate faster and stay consistent. Check back for new prompt "recipes" and editing workflows you can reuse across campaigns and content batches.