Illustration Studio
One character.
Any scene.
Choose the character once, then turn each page idea into a matching illustration.
Create
Your illustration studio
1 image slot per finished result. Failed attempts restore the slot.
Library
Your images
Finished images appear here. Pick any one to continue its character and style.
Questions about illustrations? Bundle details, consistency, downloads, and failed generations
What is the difference between Draft and Final?
Draft uses 1 book credit for 4 medium-quality JPEG images. It is the faster option for testing characters, scenes, and layouts. Final uses 2 book credits for 4 high-quality PNG images when you want the strongest available rendering quality.
How do image bundles work?
Each bundle contains 4 image-generation slots. Creating a new character reference uses 1 slot, leaving 3 scenes. Reusing an image from your library as the character reference is free, leaving all 4 slots for scenes.
Are illustrations added to my manuscript automatically?
No. Download the image files here, then add them to your book in Word, Canva, Affinity Publisher, InDesign, or another layout tool.
How do I keep the character consistent?
Keep one character reference selected. In later prompts, describe only the new action, setting, props, lighting, and camera angle. Small generative variations are still possible.
What happens if generation fails?
The image slot is restored automatically. Interrupted requests that remain stuck are also recovered when you reopen the page.
Why can an image take longer than expected?
Complex scenes and reference-guided character matching require more processing and can take around 2 minutes. Draft is usually faster than Final. The progress view stays in place while the server finishes, without repeatedly reloading your previous image.
What file and size do I receive?
Both modes create a portrait 1024 by 1536 image without added text. Draft downloads as JPEG; Final downloads as PNG. Review, crop, and place it according to your final page size and printer's bleed and resolution requirements.