acts. And of course, Jupit can copy any style you want. So if you go to an art gallery and see some amazing work, you can snap a few pictures and ask GPT to copy that style. The more images you have, the better. The prompt is simple, something like that. The only catch is that Chad GPT will not remember the style if you ask for it in another chat. So for each style, I suggest starting a new chat. Be sure to rename the chat and organize it in a special folder. Just think about all the stuff AI lets you do. generating images, videos, writing articles, blogs, and blogs are actually tricky for Chad Jubet because to write a good blog, you need ideas, research, solid headlines, CEO Chad JB can't really handle all that at once. So, for a while now, I've been testing Gravity, right? And it is new AI blog writer feature. It's actually pretty awesome and it lets me write a whole blog in minutes with me still being in control the entire time. First, I just enter the blog title, best prompting tricks for chat je. I can also ask the AI to suggest topics, which is pretty cool. Then I pick a content source for the initial outline. In my case, I want AI to come up with it, but you can also get it from research results, a URL, or realtime information from the web. Then I pick English as the language or Spanish or French. There are plenty of options. Once Gravity Wright creates the outline, I can preview it and edit it. On the right, I pick the voice, whether it is first person, professional, or whatever fits. Then I decide how long I want each section to be. It could be short, like 50 words, or super long. I usually go for something in the middle, leaning towards shorter. For keywords, I always type the main one and click to let AI suggest new ones. And the cool thing is these keywords are chosen based on data, not just AI's guess work. I recommend keeping enable list and table on as well as images. I always switch mine to AI generated images, so I don't have to worry about copyright stuff. After that, I just generate each section one by one or all at once. It's super easy to do. And once everything is ready, I can preview the final block and export it as a PDF or straight to WordPress. It took me less than a minute to go from an idea to a full blog post. Gravity Wright really saves me time. It also has a bunch of other cool tools like image generation, tax humanizer, a website builder, and even tools for YouTubers like a script writer, timestamp generator, and more. It is basically a one-stop shop for me. So create your free account today and take the first step toward faster, easier writing with AI. The links in the description. Let's also add Art Novo to the mix. It is fancy, chick, and looks expensive. The style wraps everything in elegance with organic shapes, curving lines, and nature inspired patterns. It is stylish, romantic, and perfect for character portraits, packaging, or anything with a fantasy vibe. If you want to try something different, go for expressionism. Here, emotion is the main focus. The forms get distorted, the colors clash, and the idea is to show how something feels, not how it looks. So, if you want to create a strong emotion or even sell something, this is a great pick. Now, for a bit of color, fauxm is a great choice. Honestly, I found it by accident while researching, and it is wild how often we see it, but do not realize it is fauxm. It is all about bold, unexpected colors like purple trees and orange shadows. It is perfect for eye-catching visuals, kind of like that famous Jaguar ad. But if you're doing ads, you might want to go for realism. It is the opposite of stylized. It is all about capturing the world exactly as it is. Lighting, textures, proportions, everything is carefully observed. So if you want to make something look real and tangible, realism is the best bet. Just don't go with Renaissance for anything serious. Family portraits, sure ads or business stuff, not so much. It is all about perfect proportions, religious themes, and mathematically perfect perspective. You know the deal. And lastly, let's talk about quirky style pointalism. It is probably a new one for you. Instead of strokes, it is made from dots, tiny points of colors that blend together in your eyes. Use it for a stylized yet technical effect. maybe for previewing tattoos or something
similar. Not all styles come from art. Some visual styles come from other media like brutalism. It started in architecture but now shows up in graphic designs, web, and UI. Brutalism strips everything down to the basics. It is raw, blocky, and sometimes intentional ugly. It is perfect for websites, flyers, album covers, or creating rebellious visual identity. If that is not strange enough and you want your images to have a strong 80s vibe, go for vapor wave. Remember that Kung Fury movie? That is what this style reminds me of. Vapor Wave is all about post8s consumer culture turned into art. Greek busts, floppy discs, checkerboard floors, and synth wave sunrises. It is really powerful in Janzi focused branding. music, videos, and more. You probably won't sell high-end stuff with Vapor Wave, but if you want something fancier, try Rookco minimalism. It is a weird mix of the ornate 18th century Rookco style and modern simplicity. It is delicate and elegant, but doesn't go over the top. It's perfect for jewelry, ads, and photo shoots. There are so many image generators, each with its own prompting rules, and it takes time to figure out even a simple generation. I'm not even talking proper product photography for an online store. To help with that, we've got a few PDFs with prompt templates for image generation at Geek Academy. And we've also just launched a new course into Generative AI that will take you from zero to a pro. In hours of video lessons, we will teach how to use generative AI for your own and your business's benefit with actionable prompts and tips you can use. We're publishing new lessons weekly, so click the link in the description. And right now, we're offering a massive 50% discount on a six-month access to G Academy. But maybe all those styles feel too personal, too humanlike. If you work in corporate and need a bland, soulless aesthetic, corporate Memphis is exactly that. It's the Andy style of 2018 to 2022 tech culture. Faceless vector humans with noodle limbs, lead colors and gradients. You either love it or hate it, but it really define the modern software as service look. It is great for pitch decks and startup explainer visuals. After that corporate vibe, a little escapism would be nice, right? Try cottagecore illustration. It is all about farmhouses, teacups, dried flowers, and linen dresses. The illustration style adds grainy textures and colored pencil strokes, making it feel handmade. This would be great for indie publishing, wellness brands, or eco-friendly products. Infographic futurism combines data designs with sci-fi. Think AI dashboards, hard overlays, and futuristic tech. It is clean, high concept, and perfect for startups. Kind of like what Tony Stark would have. But if you want to really hit home with people, try Dino Realism. It is like snapshot from 1950s America. Chrome, ketchup bottles, pancakes with butter dripping. It is perfect for classic American branding or retro fashion designs. If that is all too calm and predictable, check out Bioform Abstraction. It is inspired by cells, bacteria, fungi, and neural maps. It visualized tiny organic patterns in artistic ways. Honestly, I'm not even sure what to use it for, but hey, here it is. Neural noise abstraction looks like AI was trying to paint a dream and got distracted by static. It is weird, glitchy, and great for album covers or tech branding. And just for fun, Gothic digital. It mixes medieval vibes with slick digital art. Ladder mids glitch. It is great for horror games, out music branding or edgy editorial work. Or a heavy metal band with a name like the looming death.