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JoyAI Build Notes

· 9 min read·JoyAI Image Team

JoyAI image prompts: 12 templates for ecommerce edits, banners, and product photos

Use these JoyAI image prompt templates for product photos, background swaps, banner extensions, and packaging text cleanup.

JoyAI imageAI promptsecommerce image editingproduct photosbanner designworkflow guide

Focus

Prompts reutilisables pour des edits ecommerce

Format

Bibliotheque de modeles avec regles de reecriture et controles QA

Ideal pour

Les equipes merchandising, growth et contenu

Cet article est actuellement disponible uniquement en anglais. Des versions localisees seront ajoutees plus tard.

JoyAI image prompts: why templates beat one-off ideas

Most teams do not fail with JoyAI Image because the model is weak. They fail because each edit starts from a vague sentence, a different crop, and a different standard of review. If you want repeatable outputs from JoyAI image or any instruction-first editor, the fastest improvement is not a new secret parameter. It is a prompt template library.

This guide gives you practical JoyAI image prompts for ecommerce edits, banner extensions, and product-photo cleanup. The goal is simple: less guessing, fewer broken iterations, and cleaner handoff between designers, merchandisers, and growth teams.


The prompt formula that keeps edits stable

Strong editing prompts usually follow the same order:

  1. Target: what object or area should change.
  2. Action: what to do to it.
  3. Constraint: what must stay unchanged.
  4. Style or lighting: how the final image should feel.
  5. Cleanup: what artifacts to avoid.

In practice, that means a weak prompt like:

Make this product image better.

should become:

Replace the gray studio background with a warm beige paper backdrop. Keep the bottle shape, label, cap color, and front-facing angle unchanged. Preserve realistic shadows under the bottle and keep the lighting soft and premium. Remove dust, glare hotspots, and distracting edge artifacts.

The second version gives JoyAI Image a target, a boundary, and a finish line.


A simple rule before you start

Use one business intention per pass.

If you ask for a new background, new prop styling, new label text, and a new crop in the same sentence, you create four opportunities for failure. In JoyAI Image, multi-pass editing is often faster than trying to land everything in one shot.

A practical sequence is:

  1. Clean the source image.
  2. Change composition or background.
  3. Add props or brand styling.
  4. Fix text or local details.
  5. Export and review.

12 JoyAI image prompt templates that teams can reuse

Each template below is written so you can paste it into a JoyAI Image workflow and then swap the bracketed fields.

1. Background swap for a product shot

Best for catalog refreshes, landing pages, and seasonal updates.

Replace the current background with [new background]. Keep the [product] centered and unchanged in shape, color, label, and angle. Preserve realistic contact shadows and soft studio lighting. Remove leftover edges from the old background and keep the result clean and commercial.

Why it works:

  • It isolates the background as the only major change.
  • It protects the SKU from accidental redesign.
  • It asks for shadow continuity, which is where many bad edits fail.

2. Remove clutter around the hero object

Best for marketplace listings where the subject is good but the frame is noisy.

Remove the distracting objects around the [product/subject], including [object 1], [object 2], and small background clutter. Keep the main subject position, perspective, reflections, and lighting unchanged. Fill the cleared areas naturally so the image still looks photographed, not generated.

Rewrite if needed:

Remove only the background clutter. Do not change the product size, camera angle, label text, or surface texture.

3. Surface replacement without changing the product

Best for changing a tabletop, fabric, or display base while keeping the hero asset intact.

Replace the surface under the [product] with [surface description]. Keep the product position, reflections, shadows, scale, and camera angle unchanged. Match the new surface texture to the existing lighting direction and keep the final image realistic.

4. Packaging color variant

Best for fast concepting before a full brand-approved retouching pass.

Change the [product/package] color from [current color] to [new color]. Keep the material finish, label layout, proportions, highlights, and shadows unchanged. Do not redesign the logo or typography. Keep the result realistic and shelf-ready.

Important note:

  • If the image contains small text, inspect it manually after generation.
  • Color changes are easier than typography-preserving edits, so review at full size.

5. Banner extension for wide hero layouts

Best for homepage banners, email headers, and ad creative.

Extend the image horizontally for a [wide/ultrawide] banner layout. Keep the [main subject] in the original position and preserve the existing lighting, perspective, and art direction. Expand the background naturally with more [environment details]. Leave clean negative space on the [left/right] side for headline copy.

This is one of the most useful JoyAI image prompts for growth teams because it combines design intent with layout planning.

6. Add a seasonal prop without overpowering the subject

Best for campaign refreshes around holidays or launches.

Add a subtle [seasonal prop] near the [product/subject]. Keep the main subject as the visual priority. Match the existing lighting, scale, and color harmony. The added prop should feel intentional and premium, not crowded or theatrical.

Use words like subtle, secondary, and visual priority when you do not want props to hijack the frame.

7. Clean reflections, dust, and small defects

Best for polishing otherwise strong product photography.

Clean the image by removing dust, fingerprints, small scratches, glare hotspots, and distracting reflections from the [product/surface]. Keep the original material, edges, branding, and overall realism unchanged. The result should look professionally retouched, not airbrushed.

8. Replace text on packaging or signage

Best for mockups, localization concepts, and rough campaign exploration.

Replace the visible text on the [label/sign/poster] with "[new text]". Match the original typography style, alignment, perspective, spacing, and print placement as closely as possible. Keep the rest of the image unchanged and remove warped letter artifacts.

What to watch:

  • Keep replacement text short on the first pass.
  • If the model struggles, split the task into two edits:
    1. remove the old text cleanly
    2. add the new text in a second pass

9. Lifestyle scene conversion from a studio source

Best for turning clean packshots into more emotional creative.

Place the [product] into a [scene description] lifestyle environment. Keep the product identity, proportions, and front-facing label consistent with the original image. Match realistic shadows, depth of field, and color temperature so the product still feels physically present in the scene.

This is where JoyAI Image works best when the source photo is already clean and centered.

10. Mobile-friendly crop rescue

Best for adapting desktop creative to vertical placements.

Recompose the image for a [4:5 / 9:16] mobile layout. Keep the [subject] fully visible and maintain the original visual style. Extend or rebalance the surrounding space naturally. Preserve important brand elements and avoid cutting off the main action.

11. Skin, fabric, or material consistency fix

Best for portrait commerce, apparel, and soft-goods photography.

Improve the local rendering quality of the [fabric/skin/material] while keeping the original color, structure, and lighting. Remove uneven artifacts and preserve realistic texture. Do not oversoften the subject or create plastic-looking surfaces.

12. High-clarity final polish

Best as the last pass after composition is already correct.

Refine the image for a premium commercial finish. Improve clarity, edge cleanliness, tonal balance, and local detail while preserving the existing composition, subject identity, text placement, and lighting. Avoid adding new objects or changing the creative direction.

Prompt rewrite rules when JoyAI Image misses the brief

If the first result is close but unstable, do not start over with a completely different sentence. Rewrite by diagnosis.

Problem: the product changed shape

Add stronger identity constraints:

Keep the product silhouette, proportions, cap shape, label placement, and front-facing angle unchanged.

Problem: the scene looks fake

Add realism constraints:

Keep natural contact shadows, consistent lighting direction, realistic reflections, and photographic texture.

Problem: the frame became too busy

Reduce styling pressure:

Use only subtle props and keep the main subject as the visual priority.

Problem: text rendering broke

Reduce the scope:

First remove the old text cleanly without changing anything else.

Then run a second pass for the new text.

Problem: the crop is correct but copy space disappeared

Add layout language:

Leave clean negative space on the right side for headline copy and keep the subject weight balanced.

A useful internal format for teams

If several people write JoyAI Image prompts in your company, standardize the structure in a shared doc:

Field Example
Use case Homepage hero banner
Subject lock Keep bottle shape, label, and cap unchanged
Main action Extend background to the right
Style guardrails Soft premium lighting, modern skincare aesthetic
Layout need Leave negative space for headline and CTA
Review notes Check label readability and shadow realism

That format does two things:

  1. It shortens prompt-writing time.
  2. It makes reviews more objective because the team knows what success means.

A five-minute QA checklist before export

Before you ship any JoyAI Image result, check:

  1. Identity: Did the product, person, or key object stay recognizable?
  2. Text: Are labels, signs, or packaging words actually correct?
  3. Edges: Are there cutout halos, melted corners, or repeated textures?
  4. Lighting: Do shadows and highlights still agree with the scene?
  5. Business intent: Does the edit support the campaign goal, or did it just become visually louder?

For ecommerce teams, the fifth question matters more than people admit. A more decorative image is not automatically a higher-converting image.


Where JoyAI Image fits in the workflow

JoyAI Image is most effective when you treat it as a fast visual decision engine:

  • Use it to test composition directions before a full retouch.
  • Use it to generate multiple banner-layout options quickly.
  • Use it to clean or reframe source assets that are almost usable but not publishable.

It should not replace human review for typography, brand compliance, or legal claims on packaging. Those remain human responsibilities.


Conclusion

The best JoyAI image prompts are not poetic. They are operational. They tell the model what to change, what to protect, and what the finished asset must achieve.

If you only adopt one habit from this guide, make it this: stop writing from scratch every time. Build a small prompt library around your real business tasks such as background swaps, banner extensions, text cleanup, and product-polish passes. Once those templates exist, JoyAI Image becomes faster, more predictable, and much easier to scale across a team.


Tip: Save the final prompt, the source image, and the approved output together. That tiny habit turns one good result into a reusable workflow.