Wonder Tools

Ideogram, Explained šŸŖ„


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I rely on Ideogram, an AI image generator, to help me create posters, banners, social posts, newsletter illustrations, and video thumbnails.

Context: Ideogram competes in an exploding market. Gemini’s new Nano Banana Pro makes remarkable infographics, ChatGPT’s image generator produces fantastic illustrations, and Canva, Adobe, and Midjourney keep getting stronger. Yet I still find myself returning often to Ideogram. Read on for 10 reasons why — and a guide to getting started.

10 reasons I like IdeogramĀ 

* Your prompt gets automatically improved. Ideogram’s magic prompt algorithm refines your initial query. You can then approve it or revise.Ā 

* Choose from four options. Each time you submit a prompt, you get back four generated images. Getting to choose one gives you a bit of editorial input.

* Public image galleries are helpful for inspiration. Build on others’ prompts. Browse images of all shapes & styles, and top-ranked images, for ideas.

* Get accurate text within images. Ideogram generates accurate text for social media graphics, thumbnails, banners, and logos. Ideogram’s guidance on text & typography includes excellent examples of prompts and text designs.

* Pick from a variety of styles. Choose from dozens of styles, from Pop Art and Watercolor to Doodle, Travel Poster, and Surreal Collage. I often choose ā€œautoā€ because I can’t make up my mind. I tend to opt for a clean, modern look for a presentation image, or a more abstract, artsy vibe for creative projects.

* Use negative prompts. Paid subscribers can list specific elements NOT to be included in an image. That can be helpful if a particular detail could prevent your image from being usable, as in the burger example below.

* Choose your image orientation. You can generate horizontal, vertical, or square images. Free users have 11 orientation options. That’s helpful for generating images that will fit your slide, podcast, newsletter, ad banner, site header, or whatever else. Paid subscribers get additional dimension choices.

* Remix anything. Modify images you or others have generated with Ideogram’s remix button. I often tweak what I’ve generated to get closer to what I want. Be specific with your remix query: ā€œdogā€ may yield a golden retriever instead of the poodle you envisioned.

* Extend images. Ideogram’s Canvas feature lets paid users edit, extend, or combine images. Here’s a 45-second video with examples.

* Create custom styles of your own Upload or pick a few images to generate a new style you can use repeatedly for a consistent look. šŸ“ŗ Watch the promo video below to get a sense of it.šŸ‘‡ Ā 

How to start using Ideogram

* Visit Ideogram.ai and sign up for free with your Google, Apple or Microsoft account.

* Check the welcome guide for starting tips, examples, and sample prompts.

* Explore the public gallery to see others’ images and the prompts they used.

* Describe an image you envision in a few sentences. Don’t worry about precise wording. You can opt to let Ideogram refine your prompt.

* Choose a style. Decide if you want an illustrated or photographic-style image. Or pick ā€˜auto’ to let the algorithm decide. You can also select a color palette.

* Choose dimensions. Pick a wide, vertical or square image. I mostly generate wide images, which match the width of presentations or web pages.

* Click generate. On a free account, you can generate a limited number of images per day.

* Wait a minute. The service slows free requests to incentivize upgrades.

* Download the image you like and use it any way you choose.

Use an AI assistant to sharpen your image prompts

Avoid getting generic images when using Ideogram by prompting ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini to help you craft more detailed image prompts. Here’s how to prompt an AI assistant for this:

* Type a few descriptive phrases about an image you’re envisioning

* Explain how you plan to use the image (for a poster a thumbnail, etc)

* Ask for five surprising, bold, image prompts based on your context for use with your image generation tool.

* Iterate. Pick one you like and ask for three compelling variants. Test one or more of those with Ideogram.

Pricing

* Free for a limited number of image generation credits each day. Depending on traffic to Ideogram, you can expect at least five free images a day. I started on the free plan but now pay for the service

* $7/month billed annually for more images, quicker rendering, and advanced features like Canvas, which lets you modify & extend images.

Ideogram caveats

* Limited free images. I often have to iterate on a prompt several times before getting something usable. On a free plan that may mean getting only one or two quality images a day.

* Reduced image quality on downloads. Free users can only download a 70% quality JPEG image, not the full-resolution version.Ā 

* Public image creation only. All images created on the free plan are public, meaning others can view and remix them.

Alternatives

Gemini Nano Banana Pro

Google recently launched its best image generator with a surprising name and remarkable versatility. You can use Nano Banana Pro for nearly any kind of visual — from a logo, infographic, or slide design, to an edited self-portrait based on your photo or an abstract image of a dog (below).

ChatGPT’s Image Generator

ChatGPT’s built-in AI image generation tool is excellent, particularly for generating cartoons, simple diagrams, or abstract illustrations. You can’t specify the dimensions of an image, but you can use an extended chat to provide context and guidance, and you can ask the AI assistant to iterate on the image result if it doesn’t satisfy you with its first attempts. You can also select an area of a generated image and prompt it to change that part. Here’s my post about it.

Flux

Black Forest Labs, which makes the Flux 2 AI image generator, recently raised $300 million from investors. Flux images are dramatic and distinct. You can create 50 images for free after signing into the Flux Playground, or you can use the model on Hugging Face. Flux doesn’t require any special prompting lingo. I find Ideogram simpler to use, and it has a broader set of features, but Flux is excellent at generating accurate text inside images, and it’s a powerful tool on the rise. Here are Flux versions of the Ideogram image I created at the top of this post.

Adobe Firefly

Adobe has a growing suite of AI tools that keep getting better. Firefly has some unique capabilities. You can customize your image’s camera angle, lighting, color, tone and special effects, among other advanced features. Adobe has also committed to respecting creators by not training on their content without express permission. ā€œAdobe Firefly models are trained on a dataset of licensed content, such as Adobe Stock, and public domain content where copyright has expired.ā€

Concerns about AI image generation

* Less control. With editing tools like Photoshop, Illustrator, Figma, and Canva, you have full control over the pixels you’re designing. When you generate images with AI, you have less say over a visual’s specifics.

* Risk of confusion. Some AI-generated images look like real people, objects, or buildings, which can be misleading if not explained. An AI-generated photo of a person in an office might be assumed to be a real employee.

* Displacement of artists. Talented professionals may see diminishing demand for their services as people increasingly look to AI services instead of hiring creatives. And lawsuits allege that AI models were unfairly trained on human work. Getty recently lost one such suit, but others are ongoing.

* The rise of AI sludge. With AI image generation spreading, it’s easier than ever to mass produce visual images without thought. It is also easier to imitate anyone’s visual style, so AI-powered copycats may proliferate.

* Error prone. Some AI generation tools still can’t reliably reproduce text well. Words within images may be garbled, like this mangled poster made by DALL-E in 2024.

Resources for non-AI images

* Creative Commons & Openverse — search for free human-made images

* The National Gallery of Art lets you download and use its images for free

* Unsplash and Pexels are free sources for photographs

* 11 tools for diversifying your images (a Wonder Tools guide)

What have you used AI images for? What works best for you? šŸ‘‡



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Wonder ToolsBy Jeremy Caplan