These are 40 complete, paste-ready prompts for FLUX.2 — the current 2026 image model from Black Forest Labs. Each one is written the way FLUX.2 rewards: full descriptive sentences following Subject + Action + Style + Context, with the most important element first, real camera bodies and lenses, exact hex colors like #1B4B8F for brand work, quoted headline text with a named font, and the aspect ratio stated in words. No --flags, and no negative prompts — FLUX.2 doesn't use them.
They're tuned for FLUX.2 [pro] and [max], which give the best quality and typography. Keep the Flux prompt cheat sheet open while you edit these, read how to prompt Flux for photorealism for the lighting and skin language, and for text-heavy work see the text & posters collection. Coming from another model? Compare with the best Nano Banana prompts.
Photorealistic portraits
Five prompts for believable faces. Vary the lens and lighting to shift the mood, and lean on FLUX.2's natural skin texture — describe pores and catchlights so it doesn't go plastic.
1. Studio Editorial Headshot
A professional studio headshot of a woman in her thirties with shoulder-length dark hair, framed from the chest up, turned slightly off-camera with a calm, confident expression. She wears a charcoal blazer over a crisp white shirt. A three-point softbox setup with a soft rim light separates her from a seamless medium-grey backdrop. Shot on Sony A7R V, 85mm f/1.4, shallow depth of field, sharp catchlights and natural skin texture with visible pores. Photorealistic editorial style, color-accurate. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame at 2048 pixels tall.Why it works: The three-point softbox and a real 85mm f/1.4 body are the actual studio-portrait recipe, and asking for pores and catchlights keeps FLUX.2's skin believable.
2. Golden-Hour Environmental Portrait
An environmental portrait of a bearded woodworker in his forties standing in his workshop doorway at golden hour, looking directly into the lens, sawdust on his apron. Warm golden-hour backlighting rakes through the doorway with long shadows and a soft lens flare, while bounced fill lifts his face. Shot on Canon EOS R5, 35mm f/2, medium depth of field so the tools behind him stay softly legible. Warm filmic color grade, Kodak Portra 400 look. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame.Best for: Storytelling portraits where the setting matters — the 35mm keeps enough context to read the environment.
3. Chiaroscuro Black-and-White Portrait
A dramatic black-and-white portrait of an elderly woman with deep laugh lines, three-quarter view, emerging from near-total darkness. Chiaroscuro lighting: a single hard key from the upper left carves harsh high contrast across half her face while the other half falls to shadow, every wrinkle and texture rendered sharply. Shot on Leica M11 Monochrom, 50mm f/2, tight head-and-shoulders framing, fine-grain monochrome film look. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame.Why it works: A single hard key with chiaroscuro is the classic dramatic-portrait lighting, and naming a monochrome body commits the whole image to black and white.
4. Neon Night Street Portrait
A candid street portrait of a young musician mid-laugh on a rain-slicked city sidewalk at night. Magenta and cyan neon signs reflect in the wet pavement and rim-light her shoulders, while distant streetlights melt into soft bokeh behind her. Natural motion, a hint of grain, unposed documentary feel. Shot on Fujifilm X-T5, 35mm f/1.4, shallow depth of field, cinematic color. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Best for: An unposed, cinematic street look — the wet-pavement neon reflections do most of the mood work.
5. Beauty Macro Close-Up
An extreme beauty close-up of a model with heavy freckles and green eyes, filling the frame from eyebrows to lips. A beauty dish directly in front gives flattering near-shadowless light, with a reflector fill under the chin. Dewy natural skin with every freckle and fine hair visible, glossy lips, razor-sharp eyelashes. Shot on Sony A7R V, 100mm macro f/4, editorial beauty photography. Square 1:1 frame at 2048 by 2048 pixels.Why it works: A beauty dish plus a 100mm macro is how cosmetic close-ups are really lit and shot, and the high resolution keeps freckle-level detail crisp.
Product & commercial
Five prompts for clean, sellable product images. Raise guidance toward the literal end for product work, and see the product photography collection for a full library.
6. Floating Product on Seamless Gradient
A commercial product shot of a matte-black wireless earbud case floating in mid-air, centered, with a soft implied drop shadow below. Clean three-point studio lighting with a large softbox key and two edge-defining rim lights, on a smooth gradient from #F2F4F7 light grey to pure white. Edge-to-edge sharp focus, true material color, no lens reflections. Shot on 100mm macro f/8, minimalist e-commerce style. Square 1:1 frame at 2 megapixels.Best for: Marketplace and hero images — f/8 keeps the whole product sharp and the seamless hex gradient reads as premium.
7. Cosmetic Bottle with Frozen Splash
A dynamic cosmetics advertisement: a frosted-glass serum bottle standing upright as a crown of clear water splashes around it, frozen mid-motion with sharp droplets. Cool clean studio lighting with a bright rim catching the glass edges, against a soft #0FB2A6 teal gradient background. Crystal-clear frozen water, high-speed flash look, ultra-sharp droplets. Shot on 100mm macro f/11, premium beauty advertising. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame at 4 megapixels.Why it works: The frozen high-speed-flash splash with a rim on the glass edges is the signature cosmetics-ad technique, and the hex teal locks the brand background.
8. Food Hero Shot
An appetizing hero shot of a stacked cheeseburger with melting cheese and fresh toppings on a dark slate board, viewed at a 45-degree angle. Warm directional side lighting with a soft fill reveals steam and texture with a hint of golden-hour warmth. Glistening sauce, sharp sesame seeds, crisp garnish, background softly blurred. Shot on Canon EOS R5, 50mm f/2.8, shallow depth of field, editorial food photography. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame.Best for: Menus and delivery apps — directional side light is what makes food look textured and fresh rather than flat.
9. Sneaker on a Concrete Plinth
A hero product shot of a white high-top sneaker displayed on a raw concrete plinth, three-quarter angle. A single dramatic hard key from the upper right casts a crisp defined shadow, against a cool grey studio background with a subtle vignette. Every stitch, lace, and texture sharp, true material color. Shot on 85mm f/8, bold streetwear advertising style. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: A single hard key on a concrete plinth gives sneakers the sculptural, editorial look brands use, with a shadow that grounds the shoe.
10. Watch Macro Detail
A luxury macro product shot of a stainless-steel automatic watch on a dark brushed-metal surface, three-quarter view, crown toward the camera. Controlled studio lighting with soft gradient reflections tracing the polished bezel and a bright specular highlight on the crystal. Every engraving, hand, and hour marker razor-sharp, true metal color, deep contrast. Shot on 100mm macro f/8, premium watch advertising. Square 1:1 frame at 4 megapixels.Best for: Jewellery and watch listings — controlled gradient reflections are how polished metal is really photographed, and 4MP holds the engraving.
Logos & branding
Five prompts where the mark and the letters have to be clean. Quote the exact words, name the font, and set brand colors with hex codes. For a deeper library, see the logo design collection.
11. Minimalist Wordmark Logo
A minimalist wordmark logo reading "LUMEN" in a clean geometric sans-serif similar to Futura Bold, letters evenly spaced with generous tracking. Deep navy #1B4B8F letters perfectly centered on a flat off-white #F7F5F0 background. Crisp vector edges, no texture, no shadow, generous margins, timeless and brandable. Square 1:1 frame.Why it works: The exact word is quoted, kept to one short ALL-CAPS token, a specific font is named, and both colors are pinned with hex — the habits that make FLUX.2 spell logos correctly.
12. Circular Emblem Badge Logo
A vintage circular emblem logo for a coffee roaster. Inside a clean double-ring badge, the text "NORTH ROAST" curves along the top in a bold condensed serif, with "EST. 2026" in small caps along the bottom, and a simple line-art mountain in the center. Two-color flat vector design in forest green #1F3D2B and cream #EFE7D3, symmetrical and crisp on a plain background. Square 1:1 frame.Best for: Badge and crest logos — putting each text string in its own quotes and naming its weight keeps the curved type readable.
13. Geometric App Mark
A modern abstract app-mark logo built from two overlapping rounded triangles forming an upward arrow, rendered as a single clean geometric symbol with no text. A smooth diagonal gradient from #6D5DF6 indigo to #B14BF4 violet fills the mark, crisp vector edges, subtle inner depth, centered on a plain #0E1116 charcoal background. Flat modern tech-brand style. Square 1:1 frame.Why it works: Describing one abstract geometric symbol with no text, plus a hex gradient, avoids the clutter that makes app marks unreadable at small sizes.
14. Lettermark Monogram
A refined lettermark monogram combining the letters "AV" into a single elegant interlocking symbol, high-contrast serif construction with clean thick-and-thin strokes. Deep burgundy #7A1F2B on a soft ivory #F4EDE4 background, perfectly centered, precise vector edges, luxury fashion-brand feel, generous whitespace. Square 1:1 frame.Best for: Fashion and personal brands — quoting the two initials and describing an interlock keeps the monogram from turning into random shapes.
15. Mascot Logo
A friendly flat mascot logo of a bold cartoon fox head, front-facing, made of clean geometric shapes with confident thick outlines and minimal shading. Warm orange #FF6B35 fur with cream #FFF3E6 accents and dark #22201E linework, on a plain white background. Below the mascot, the wordmark "FOXWORKS" in a rounded bold sans-serif. Balanced, scalable, playful sports-brand style. Square 1:1 frame.Why it works: Flat shapes, thick outlines, and named hex colors keep the mascot crisp, while the quoted wordmark under it renders as clean type.
Posters & typography
Five prompts built around quoted in-image text. Put the headline near the start so FLUX.2 plans the layout around it, keep strings short, and name the font. More in the text, posters & ads collection.
16. Music Festival Poster
A bold music-festival poster with the large headline "NIGHT WAVES" in a heavy condensed sans-serif across the top and a smaller line "JULY 2026" beneath it. Behind the type, a vibrant sunset-gradient sky from #FF3D77 magenta to #FF9E2C orange over a silhouetted crowd with hands raised. High contrast, punchy modern gig-poster design, clean legible typography. Vertical 2:3 portrait frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: The headline instruction leads the prompt and stays under five words, and the two-stop hex gradient gives the sky an exact, repeatable brand palette.
17. Quote Typography Poster
A minimalist typography poster with the phrase "STAY CURIOUS" centered in a large elegant serif similar to Playfair Display, deep charcoal #2A2A2E letters on a warm cream #F3ECDD background. A thin muted-gold #C9A24B underline accent sits below the words, with lots of negative space and a gallery-print aesthetic, perfectly centered and crisp. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame at 2 megapixels.Best for: Wall-art and quote prints — a short two-word phrase in one named serif renders cleanly and prints well at 2MP.
18. Product Launch Ad
A clean product-launch advertisement with the headline "MEET AURA" in a bold modern sans-serif at the top and a small tagline "Sound, reimagined." in a light weight beneath it. A sleek matte-black pair of headphones sits centered on a soft #1B4B8F blue gradient, lit with a bright studio key and rim light. Generous negative space, premium tech-ad composition, sharp product focus. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: A short quoted headline and a separately quoted tagline let FLUX.2 render two type weights without garbling either, while the hex blue anchors the brand.
19. Retro Travel Poster
A retro travel poster with the ALL-CAPS headline "VISIT MARS" in a bold geometric sans-serif across the top. Below it, a stylised red desert landscape with a distant domed colony under a pink sky, painted in a warm mid-century palette of rust #B5462E, sand #E8C39E, and dusty pink #E9A0A0. Screen-print texture, clean flat shapes, vintage tourism-poster aesthetic. Vertical 2:3 portrait frame.Best for: Nostalgic prints and covers — the mid-century hex palette plus a short quoted headline gives a cohesive, on-era look.
20. Sale Banner with Two Headlines
A bright e-commerce sale banner with the giant headline "SUMMER SALE" in a heavy rounded sans-serif and a bold sub-line "UP TO 50% OFF" beneath it. Playful confetti shapes scatter around the type, on a cheerful two-tone background of coral #FF6B6B and sunny yellow #FFD23F. Crisp legible typography, high energy, clean modern retail design, balanced composition. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: Two short quoted strings and a two-color hex scheme keep the banner readable and instantly rebrandable for different sales.
Characters & concept art
Five prompts for character design and concept work. Describe silhouette, materials, and mood, and name the render or paint style so the whole frame commits to it.
21. Cyberpunk Character Concept
A cyberpunk character concept of a street hacker in a cropped tactical jacket with glowing circuit trims, standing three-quarter view in a neon alley. Magenta and cyan practical lights rim her silhouette while a warm holographic display glows on her forearm. Detailed costume design, weathered textures, cinematic atmosphere with light haze. Rendered as high-detail digital concept art, painterly realism. Vertical 2:3 portrait frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: Naming the silhouette, costume details, and practical neon rim light gives FLUX.2 the specifics a concept artist would brief, so the character reads clearly.
22. Fantasy Ranger Character Sheet
A fantasy character sheet of a forest ranger, full-body front view, standing in a neutral A-pose on a plain parchment #EAD8B4 background. Detailed leather-and-cloth armor in mossy green #3E5C43 with worn brass buckles, a longbow across the back, a hooded cloak, and knee-high boots. Even soft studio lighting, clear silhouette, high-detail fantasy concept art suitable for a game asset. Vertical 2:3 portrait frame.Best for: Game and RPG design — a front A-pose on a plain hex background gives a clean reference sheet you can iterate from.
23. Sci-Fi Mech Concept
An industrial sci-fi mech concept, a heavy bipedal exosuit standing three-quarter view in a hangar, hydraulic joints and layered armor plating with visible panel lines, scuffs, and stencilled markings. Cool ambient hangar light with a warm orange #E8721C worklamp glow from below, volumetric dust in the air. Hard-surface concept-art rendering, deep detail, cinematic scale. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: Hard-surface language — panel lines, scuffs, stencilled markings — plus a warm hex worklamp gives the mech believable weight and material.
24. Storybook Hero Character
A charming storybook hero character, a small round-cheeked explorer kid in an oversized yellow raincoat and red boots, holding a lantern, mid-stride with a curious grin. Soft warm lighting, gentle painterly shading, cozy limited palette of buttery yellow #F4C542 and warm red #D34E3A on a soft cream background. Hand-illustrated children's-book style with clean shapes. Square 1:1 frame at 2 megapixels.Best for: Picture books and app mascots — a friendly silhouette, an action, and a warm hex palette keep the character consistent and appealing.
25. Painterly Villain Portrait
A dramatic painterly portrait of a fantasy sorcerer-villain, upper body, hooded, half his face lit by the cold violet #6A3FB0 glow of a spell cupped in his hand while the rest sinks into shadow. Ornate dark robes with intricate silver embroidery, a cruel calm expression. Rich oil-painting texture, visible brushwork, deep chiaroscuro, epic fantasy cover-art style. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: A single colored key light in hex plus oil-painting texture language gives the mood and finish of a real fantasy book cover.
Landscapes & nature
Five wide, high-resolution prompts. These lean on deep focus, atmosphere, and wide aspect ratios — ideal for wallpapers and print. Push resolution toward 4MP for these.
26. Cinematic Mountain Landscape
A sweeping cinematic landscape of a misty pine valley at sunrise, layered mountain ridges fading into atmospheric haze. Golden-hour backlighting rakes low across the valley with long shadows and volumetric god-rays through the trees, soft mist hugging the treeline. Rich depth, ultra-detailed foreground foliage, epic scale. Shot on 24mm, deep focus, photorealistic. Ultra-wide 21:9 frame at 4 megapixels.Why it works: Volumetric god-rays and layered haze create real atmospheric depth, and 21:9 at 4MP is ready to use as a desktop wallpaper.
27. Misty Forest at Dawn
A serene old-growth forest at dawn, tall moss-covered trunks receding into cool blue-grey fog, soft shafts of light filtering between the trees onto a fern-covered floor. Damp bark, glistening leaves, a quiet stream in the foreground catching the light. Muted natural palette, deep atmospheric perspective, ultra-detailed, photorealistic. Shot on 35mm, deep depth of field. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Best for: Calm, immersive backgrounds — atmospheric perspective and foreground detail give the forest genuine depth.
28. Desert Dunes at Golden Hour
A minimalist desert landscape at golden hour, vast rolling sand dunes with sharp wind-carved ridgelines dividing warm sunlit slopes from deep cool-shadow faces. Long raking side light, fine sand texture, a lone set of footprints curving into the distance, clean uncluttered composition. Warm amber and soft violet shadow palette, photorealistic, deep focus. Shot on 50mm. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Why it works: Low raking side light is what sculpts dunes into crisp light-and-shadow ridgelines, and the minimal composition keeps it elegant.
29. Coastal Cliffs Long Exposure
A dramatic coastline at blue hour, rugged dark cliffs meeting the sea, with a long-exposure look that turns the crashing water into smooth silky mist around the rocks. Deep teal and slate palette, a faint band of warm light on the horizon, moody overcast sky, ultra-detailed rock texture. Photorealistic fine-art landscape. Shot on 24mm, deep focus, tripod long exposure. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Best for: Fine-art prints — describing the long-exposure smoothing of the water gives that signature silky-sea effect.
30. Milky Way Over the Alps
A breathtaking night-sky landscape: a vivid Milky Way arching over silhouetted jagged alpine peaks, with a still glacial lake mirroring the stars below. Deep blues and purples, thousands of crisp stars, faint green airglow near the horizon, subtle foreground rocks lit by starlight. Long-exposure astrophotography look, ultra-detailed, no light pollution. Shot on 20mm f/2.8. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Why it works: The reflected Milky Way and long-exposure language give it real astrophotography credibility, and 16:9 at 4MP fills a monitor cleanly.
Interiors & architecture
Four prompts for spaces and buildings. Mix window daylight with warm practical lamps, use deep focus, and describe real materials the way an architectural photographer would.
31. Scandinavian Living Room
A photorealistic interior of a cozy Scandinavian living room, warm and inviting. Soft natural daylight streams through large windows with sheer curtains, gentle overcast diffusion balanced by warm practical lamp glow in the corners. Light oak floors, a linen sofa, wool throws, greenery, and a low coffee table. Balanced composition, architectural-photography style, true color. Shot on 24mm f/8, deep focus. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Best for: Interior mood boards and listings — mixing window daylight with warm practical lamps is how real interiors are photographed.
32. Modern Kitchen Render
A clean modern kitchen interior, handleless matte cabinetry in deep #2E3A34 forest green with a pale marble waterfall island and warm brass fixtures. Bright even daylight from a wide window, subtle warm under-cabinet lighting, polished concrete floor, a few styled ceramics on the counter. Photorealistic architectural-visualisation render, crisp reflections, true material color. Shot on 24mm f/8, deep focus. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Why it works: Naming cabinetry, marble, and brass with an exact hex green gives a realistic archviz look with a controllable palette.
33. Brutalist Concept Building
An architectural concept shot of a brutalist concrete museum at dusk, bold cantilevered geometric volumes with deep board-formed texture, set against a clear gradient sky from #1B2A4A deep blue to soft amber at the horizon. Warm interior light glows from recessed windows, a shallow reflecting pool mirrors the facade. Dramatic low-angle composition, ultra-detailed concrete, photorealistic architectural photography. Shot on 24mm tilt-shift, deep focus. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Best for: Architecture concepts — a low angle with a tilt-shift and a hex sky gradient reads as a professional building shoot.
34. Boutique Hotel Lobby
A luxurious boutique hotel lobby at evening, rich textures of walnut paneling, veined marble floors, velvet seating in deep emerald #135240, and warm brass accents. Layered lighting from sculptural pendant lamps and soft wall washers creates an intimate glow, with a large arched window showing the blue-hour city beyond. Balanced symmetrical composition, photorealistic interior photography, true color. Shot on 24mm f/8, deep focus. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 4 megapixels.Why it works: Layered practical lighting and named premium materials with a hex accent give the warm, high-end look real hotel interiors are shot for.
Art styles & illustration
Three prompts for non-photographic looks. Name the medium precisely — watercolor, flat vector, isometric render — so the whole image commits to one style.
35. Watercolor City Illustration
A loose watercolor illustration of a rainy Paris street at dusk, painted with soft wet-on-wet washes, visible paper texture, gentle color bleeds, and delicate ink line accents on the rooftops and lamplight. Muted palette of dusty blue #6E88A6, warm grey, and soft amber, with plenty of white paper showing through and glowing window reflections on the wet street. Airy, hand-painted, atmospheric. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame.Why it works: Watercolor-specific language — wet-on-wet, paper texture, color bleeds, white paper showing through — commits FLUX.2 to a real painting look instead of a filtered photo.
36. Flat Vector Scene
A friendly flat-design vector illustration of a person watering a large houseplant in a cozy apartment, centered composition, built from bold clean shapes with no gradients and confident outlines. Warm limited palette of terracotta #C96F4A, sage #8AA37B, and cream #F3ECE1, soft even lighting, modern flat illustration style for a web hero. Crisp vector edges. Horizontal 16:9 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Best for: Landing-page graphics and blog headers — flat color, no gradients, and named hex tones keep it genuinely vector-like and on-brand.
37. Isometric Diorama
A cute isometric 3D miniature of a cozy corner bookshop, rendered as a tiny cutaway diorama floating on a plain #F0F1F4 background. Soft studio lighting with gentle ambient occlusion, clean pastel colors, rounded low-poly furniture, tiny detailed props like stacked books and a reading lamp. Sharp clay render, soft shadows, tilt-shift miniature feel, Blender-style. Square 1:1 frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: The isometric miniature-diorama style with ambient occlusion and a plain hex backdrop reads as clean and modern at any size.
Editing & multi-reference
Three prompts for image-to-image and multi-reference work. FLUX.2 combines up to 10 reference images — describe only the change, and tell the model which reference is the subject and which supplies the style.
38. Recolor with a Brand Hex
Using the attached product photo, change only the color of the jacket to brand blue #1B4B8F. Keep the fabric texture, folds, shadows, the person, the background, and all lighting exactly the same, altering nothing except the jacket's color so the new blue follows the existing folds and highlights naturally. Photorealistic, preserve the original framing and resolution.Best for: Product and wardrobe variants — pinning the target color to an exact hex and locking everything else isolates the edit to one object.
39. Place a Product in a Scene
Using the two attached references — the first is an empty marble kitchen counter, the second is my product bottle — place the product naturally on the counter, standing upright and slightly right of center. Match the scene's light direction, add a soft realistic shadow and a faint reflection on the marble, and keep the product's label, shape, and colors identical to the reference. Do not change the background scene. Horizontal 3:2 landscape frame at 2 megapixels.Why it works: Telling FLUX.2 which reference is the scene and which is the subject, then matching light and shadow, keeps the label true while the composite reads as real.
40. Consistent Character in a New Setting
Using the attached reference images of my character — image one for the face, image two for the costume, image three for the color style — place the same character in a sunlit rooftop garden at golden hour, standing three-quarter view looking off-camera. Keep the face, hairstyle, and costume identical to the references, matching the reference color palette. Warm golden-hour light with a soft rim, shot on 50mm f/2, photorealistic. Vertical 4:5 portrait frame at 2 megapixels.Best for: Building a consistent character across shots — labelling each of the up-to-ten references by role is how FLUX.2 keeps identity and wardrobe stable.
Once a prompt lands close, keep the Flux prompt cheat sheet open to tune it, read the photorealism guide for lighting and skin language, and use the multi-reference edits above to fix the last details instead of regenerating from scratch.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is FLUX.2 and who makes it?
FLUX.2 is a text-to-image model family from Black Forest Labs, the current 2026 generation of Flux. It renders photorealistic images, best-in-class in-image text, and precise brand colors, and it reads full descriptive prompts rather than tag-soup. The framework it rewards is Subject + Action + Style + Context, with the most important element placed first because word order matters.
Which FLUX.2 tier should I use?
Use FLUX.2 [pro] for the best all-round quality and text, and [max] for the highest fidelity and typography on posters and logos. Choose [flex] when you want to hand-tune Steps and Guidance yourself, [klein] for distilled sub-second drafts with fixed parameters, and [dev] open weights to run locally in ComfyUI. For the prompts on this page, [pro] or [max] give the most reliable results.
Does FLUX.2 render text in images?
Yes — FLUX.2 has best-in-class typography and renders in-image text far better than older models. Wrap the exact words in quotes, name the font and weight, and give the placement. Keep headlines short and legible. For precise design work, FLUX.2 [pro] also accepts JSON-structured prompts that specify exact text positions, fonts, and styling.
Do hex color codes work in FLUX.2 prompts?
Yes. Put a hex code such as #1B4B8F directly in the prompt and FLUX.2 reproduces that exact color, which makes it ideal for brand palettes. Name the color's role too — for example, a #FF6B35 orange logo mark on a #0E1116 charcoal background — so the model applies each color where you want it.
Does FLUX.2 support negative prompts?
No. FLUX.2 does not support negative prompts, so you describe what you want rather than what you don't. Instead of adding a negative for blur, ask for sharp focus and deep depth of field; instead of excluding text, describe the clean surface you want. There are also no Midjourney-style --flags — write the aspect ratio and settings in plain words.
Where can I run FLUX.2 prompts?
Run them in the Black Forest Labs playground at bfl.ai, through the FLUX API, or on partner platforms such as fal, Replicate, Freepik, LTX, and Scenario. The open-weight [dev] tier runs locally in ComfyUI. Every prompt on this page is plain text, so paste it into any of these and adjust the bracketed details.
How do I set the aspect ratio and resolution?
FLUX.2 sets the aspect ratio from the width and height you request, and output dimensions must be multiples of 16. State the ratio in words in the prompt — for example, a 3:2 landscape frame — and pick a resolution up to 4MP (2048x2048); around 2MP (1440–1536px) is recommended for most work. Common ratios are 1:1, 3:2, 2:3, 4:3, 3:4, 16:9, and 9:16.
How long should a FLUX.2 prompt be?
The sweet spot is medium length — about 30 to 80 words of descriptive sentences. Use short 10–30 word prompts for quick concepts and 80+ words only for complex, layered scenes. Put the main subject first, then the key action, critical style, and essential context. If you start from a short prompt, the prompt_upsampling option auto-adds detail while keeping your intent.
How do I keep a character or product consistent across images?
Use FLUX.2 multi-reference: combine up to 10 reference images in a single generation — for example a product, a face, and a style reference — and the model keeps those subjects consistent. Describe the new scene, then tell the model which reference is the subject and which supplies the style or background so it applies each one correctly.