These are 24 complete, paste-ready image prompts for FLUX.2 by Black Forest Labs — built for text you can actually read. FLUX.2 has best-in-class typography: it renders legible, correctly-spelled in-image type where older models produce gibberish, reproduces exact hex color codes for brand palettes, and on the [pro] tier accepts JSON-structured prompts that specify exact text positions, fonts, and styling. That makes it the tool for posters, ads, quotes, menus, magazine covers, and social graphics.

Every prompt below follows the same rules: the exact words go in "quotes", each element stays short, the font style and weight are named, placement is stated, hex colors set the palette, and the aspect ratio is written out in words. There are no Midjourney --flags and no negative prompts — FLUX.2 doesn't support either. Want the full set? Start with the 40 best Flux prompts roundup, and keep the Flux prompt cheat sheet open while you copy.

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The text rules that work

Legible type in FLUX.2 comes down to five habits, and every prompt on this page uses them:

  1. Keep quoted text short. Wrap the exact words in "quotes" and hold each element to roughly one to five words. Short strings render clean; long paragraphs garble.
  2. Name the font. Describe the class, weight, and case — "heavy condensed sans-serif", "high-contrast serif", "rounded geometric sans" — so the letterforms match your intent.
  3. Put the text instruction early. Word order matters in FLUX.2, so lead with the headline and its placement; the model plans the layout around the type first.
  4. Use hex colors. Drop codes like #FF6B35 straight into the prompt for exact background, headline, and accent colors — perfect for brand palettes.
  5. State the aspect ratio in words. No flags: write "a tall two-to-three portrait poster frame" or "a wide sixteen-to-nine banner frame."

For precise multi-element layouts, [pro] accepts a JSON text block that lists each string with its position, font, weight, and color — prompt 6 below shows exactly how. For text-heavy print work, [max] pushes typography fidelity highest, while [flex] is the tier to reach for when you want to hand-tune guidance for a stubborn layout. See the full breakdown in the best Flux prompts roundup.

Event & gig posters

Four prompts that hang a short, bold headline on a strong composition. Quote the title and date, name the type, set hex colors, and use a tall two-to-three portrait frame for print.

1. Minimalist Concert Gig Poster

A minimalist concert gig poster. Large headline text "MIDNIGHT ECHO" set in a
heavy condensed grotesque sans-serif, all-caps, centered in the upper third,
in warm off-white #F5F0E6. Below it a smaller line "LIVE AT THE FORGE — MAR 14"
in a light uppercase sans. Background a deep plum #2B1B3A with a single soft
spotlight halo behind the type. Flat, high-contrast, modern editorial poster
style. Composition as a tall two-to-three portrait poster frame.

Why it works: the headline is two short words in quotes, the font and case are named, and the two hex colors lock the palette so the type stays crisp.

2. Retro Music Festival Lineup Poster

A retro 1970s music festival poster. Bold arched headline "SUNRISE FEST" in a
groovy rounded display serif, all-caps, centered near the top in burnt orange
#E4572E. Beneath it three short lineup lines "FRIDAY", "SATURDAY", "SUNDAY" in
a clean uppercase sans, evenly spaced. Warm gradient sky background from
#FFB627 to #E4572E with a stylised sun and palm silhouettes. Vintage screen-print
texture, limited warm palette. Composition as a tall two-to-three portrait
poster frame.

Best for: festival and gig lineups — each day label is its own short quoted string, so they render as clean separate lines.

3. Tech Conference Keynote Poster

A modern tech conference poster. Headline "BUILD 2026" in a bold geometric
sans-serif, all-caps, top-left aligned in bright cyan #22D3EE. Below it a
subhead "THE FUTURE, SHIPPED" in a medium uppercase sans in white, and a small
footer line "SEP 9 · SAN FRANCISCO" in light grey #9CA3AF. Background deep navy
#0B1220 with subtle abstract gradient mesh lines. Clean, minimal, corporate
keynote style. Composition as a tall three-to-four portrait poster frame.

Why it works: three quoted elements form a clear hierarchy — headline, subhead, footer — each with its own hex color and named weight.

4. Club Night Flyer With Date Block

A high-energy club night flyer. Oversized headline "PULSE" in a heavy
italic sans-serif, all-caps, centered and slightly skewed, in electric magenta
#FF2D95. Below it a bold date block "SAT · 22:00 · WAREHOUSE 9" in a condensed
uppercase sans in white. Background matte black #0A0A0A with glowing magenta and
cyan light streaks. Gritty, nightlife, high-contrast poster style. Composition
as a tall two-to-three portrait poster frame.

Best for: nightlife promo — the compact date block reads as one legible line while the single-word headline dominates.

Product ads with headline & subtext

Four ad prompts that pair a hero product with a headline and supporting subtext. Prompt 6 uses a JSON-structured text block for [pro] to place each string exactly.

5. Sneaker Drop Ad With Headline

A bold sneaker drop advertisement. Headline "STEP LOUDER" in a heavy extended
sans-serif, all-caps, upper-left in white, with a smaller subtext line
"NEW AIRFLOW 3 — OUT NOW" in a medium uppercase sans in acid green #B6FF3C.
A single vivid running shoe floating centre-right, dramatic studio light,
crisp shadow. Background split diagonally between charcoal #1B1B1B and acid
green #B6FF3C. Punchy, modern streetwear ad style. Composition as a square
one-to-one frame. Shot on 50mm, sharp product focus.

Best for: product launches — headline plus subtext plus a hero object, with the accent hex tying the type to the background.

6. Skincare Product Ad (JSON layout, [pro])

A clean minimalist skincare advertisement on a soft sand #EDE4D3 background,
a single frosted-glass serum bottle centered with soft daylight and a gentle
shadow. Photorealistic product studio style. Place the text exactly as specified
in this JSON:
{
  "text_elements": [
    { "content": "GLOW DAILY",  "position": "top-center",    "font": "high-contrast serif", "weight": "bold",   "case": "uppercase", "color": "#2E2A24" },
    { "content": "Vitamin-C Serum", "position": "below headline", "font": "light sans-serif", "weight": "regular", "case": "titlecase", "color": "#6B5E4A" },
    { "content": "SHOP NOW",     "position": "bottom-center",  "font": "geometric sans-serif","weight": "semibold","case": "uppercase", "color": "#FFFFFF", "background": "#C08457" }
  ]
}
Composition as a tall four-to-five portrait frame. Render at high resolution
for crisp small type.

Why it works: on [pro] the JSON block names each string's exact position, font, weight, case, and hex color, so the model places the headline, product line, and button chip precisely instead of guessing the hierarchy.

7. SaaS App Feature Ad

A sleek SaaS app feature ad. Headline "SHIP FASTER" in a bold geometric
sans-serif, all-caps, upper-left in white, with a subtext line "Automate your
release pipeline" in a regular sans in light grey #CBD5E1. A floating
smartphone mockup on the right showing a clean dashboard UI. Background a smooth
gradient from indigo #4F46E5 to violet #7C3AED. Modern, minimal, product-marketing
style. Composition as a wide sixteen-to-nine banner frame.

Best for: web hero banners and app store ads — the gradient hexes and named weights keep the layout on-brand.

8. Coffee Brand Billboard Ad

A warm coffee brand billboard. Oversized headline "WAKE UP SLOWLY" in a chunky
rounded sans-serif, all-caps, centered in cream #FBF3E4, with a small tagline
"Small-batch roast · since 2019" in a light serif below. A single steaming
ceramic cup on a wooden table, warm morning light. Background rich espresso
brown #3B2A21 with soft steam. Cozy, premium lifestyle ad style. Composition
as a wide sixteen-to-nine banner frame. Shot on 85mm f/1.8, shallow depth of
field.

Why it works: a three-word headline plus a short tagline reads cleanly at billboard scale, and the two warm hexes carry the brand mood.

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Motivational & quote graphics

Three quote layouts where the words are the whole image. Keep the quote short, quote it exactly, and let one bold font carry it.

9. Bold Quote Card for Instagram

A bold typographic quote card. The centered quote "DONE IS BETTER THAN PERFECT"
in a heavy condensed sans-serif, all-caps, stacked across four lines in warm
white #FDFCF7, with "PERFECT" emphasised larger. Small attribution line
"— on shipping" beneath in a light italic serif. Background a flat deep teal
#0E4D4A with a subtle grain texture. Minimal, high-impact social poster style.
Composition as a square one-to-one frame.

Best for: feed posts — stacking the quote across lines and emphasising one word gives typographic rhythm without extra graphics.

10. Minimal Serif Motivational Poster

A minimal motivational poster. The phrase "KEEP GOING" in a large elegant
high-contrast serif, title case, centered, in charcoal #23201C on a warm ivory
#F3EEE3 background. A single thin underline stroke in muted gold #B8935A beneath
the words. Generous margins, calm and refined, gallery-print style. Composition
as a tall two-to-three portrait frame.

Why it works: two words, one elegant serif, and a restrained gold accent hex — the whitespace does the work.

11. Gradient Affirmation Graphic

A soft gradient affirmation graphic. The centered text "YOU ARE ENOUGH" in a
rounded friendly sans-serif, title case, in white with a gentle glow. Background
a smooth diagonal gradient from coral #FF8FA3 to lavender #B197FC. A few subtle
floating light particles. Dreamy, warm, wellness-app aesthetic. Composition as
a tall four-to-five portrait frame.

Best for: wellness and self-care content — the gradient hexes give an on-trend, gentle backdrop for short affirmations.

Social media & story graphics

Four vertical and square graphics for stories, carousels, and announcements. Use a tall nine-to-sixteen story frame or a square frame, and keep each label short.

12. Instagram Story Announcement

A clean Instagram story announcement. Headline "WE'RE HIRING" in a bold
geometric sans-serif, all-caps, centered upper-third in white, with a subtext
line "Frontend engineers · remote" in a medium sans below. A small "SWIPE UP"
pill button near the bottom in white text on a coral #FF6B35 chip. Background a
deep indigo #1E1B4B with subtle abstract shapes. Modern, minimal story style.
Composition as a tall nine-to-sixteen vertical frame.

Best for: recruiting and launch stories — the pill button chip is its own short quoted element with a brand hex.

13. Carousel Cover With Big Number

A bold carousel cover slide. An oversized numeral "7" in a heavy display
sans-serif filling the left half in bright yellow #FFD23F, with the headline
"MISTAKES KILLING YOUR GROWTH" in a condensed uppercase sans stacked on the
right in white. Small "SWIPE →" hint in the bottom-right in light grey #9CA3AF.
Background flat near-black #111111. Punchy, editorial, educational carousel
style. Composition as a square one-to-one frame.

Why it works: the giant numeral anchors the layout while the quoted headline and swipe hint stay short and legible.

14. Podcast Episode Quote Graphic

A podcast episode quote graphic. The pull-quote "SAY YES, THEN FIGURE IT OUT"
in a medium humanist serif, title case, centered in warm cream #F4ECE0. Above
it a small label "EPISODE 42" in a light uppercase sans in muted teal #4FD1C5.
A thin waveform line across the bottom in teal. Background deep slate #17202A.
Clean, modern podcast-brand style. Composition as a square one-to-one frame.

Best for: podcast promo — episode label, pull-quote, and a waveform accent all sit in a tidy quoted hierarchy.

15. Flash Sale Story Graphic

A bold flash sale story graphic. Oversized headline "50% OFF" in a heavy
extended sans-serif, all-caps, centered in white on a bright red #E11D2E band.
Below it a subtext line "TODAY ONLY — CODE FLUX50" in a condensed uppercase sans
in white. Background split between red #E11D2E and off-white #FAFAFA with a bold
diagonal edge. Loud, urgent, retail promo style. Composition as a tall
nine-to-sixteen vertical frame.

Why it works: the discount and promo code are short quoted strings, so the numerals and letters render exactly.

Three menu layouts — the hardest text job here, since prices and multiple lines stack up. Keep each item short, name the font, and lean on [pro] or [max] for the cleanest small type.

16. Cafe Chalkboard Menu Board

A rustic cafe chalkboard menu. Header "TODAY'S BREW" in a hand-lettered chalk
script, centered in white chalk. Below it four short menu rows in a clean chalk
sans: "ESPRESSO 3.0", "FLAT WHITE 4.0", "COLD BREW 4.5", "MOCHA 5.0", each with
the price right-aligned. Small chalk coffee-bean doodles in the corners.
Background a dark slate chalkboard #23231F with faint chalk dust. Cozy,
handcrafted cafe style. Composition as a tall three-to-four portrait frame.

Best for: cafe and food stalls — each item plus price is one short quoted row, which keeps the numbers accurate.

17. Modern Restaurant Price List

A modern minimalist restaurant menu card. Header "SMALL PLATES" in a
high-contrast serif, all-caps, top-left in deep olive #3E4A2E. Below it four
menu rows in a light serif with dotted leaders to right-aligned prices:
"BURRATA 12", "GNOCCHI 16", "SEA BASS 24", "TIRAMISU 9". Generous whitespace,
warm paper #F6F1E7 background, refined editorial style. Composition as a tall
two-to-three portrait frame. Render at high resolution for crisp small type.

Why it works: dotted leaders plus right-aligned prices are described explicitly, and high resolution keeps the small serif legible.

18. Cocktail Bar Menu Card

A moody cocktail bar menu card. Header "SIGNATURES" in an elegant condensed
serif, all-caps, centered in antique gold #C9A24B. Below it three cocktail
rows, each a name in italic serif and a short descriptor in light sans:
"NEGRONI 14", "PALOMA 13", "OLD FASHIONED 15", prices right-aligned in gold.
Background deep forest green #14261E with a subtle art-deco border. Luxe,
speakeasy style. Composition as a tall three-to-four portrait frame.

Best for: bars and lounges — the gold hex and deco border sell the mood while the short rows stay readable.

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Magazine covers

Three cover layouts with a masthead, cover lines, and a hero subject. Covers need several short text elements, so quote each one and set a portrait frame.

19. Fashion Magazine Cover

A high-fashion magazine cover. Masthead "VÉLOUR" in a bold high-contrast serif,
all-caps, spanning the top in white. A confident model in a tailored coat,
head-and-shoulders, direct gaze, studio light. Two cover lines: "THE BOLD ISSUE"
upper-left and "AUTUMN 2026" lower-right, both in a light uppercase sans in
white. Background a warm terracotta #C4553B studio backdrop. Editorial fashion
photography, sharp and glossy. Composition as a tall two-to-three portrait
frame. Shot on 85mm f/1.4.

Best for: fashion and beauty mockups — masthead plus two cover lines mirrors a real cover grid.

20. Travel Magazine Cover

A travel magazine cover. Masthead "WANDER" in a clean geometric sans-serif,
all-caps, top-centered in white. A sweeping coastal cliff at golden hour behind
it. Two cover lines: "48 HOURS IN LISBON" mid-left and "ISSUE 58" bottom-right,
in a medium uppercase sans in warm cream #F5EFE1. A small yellow #FFC94A accent
bar under the masthead. Vivid landscape photography, rich and inviting.
Composition as a tall three-to-four portrait frame.

Why it works: the masthead leads the prompt, and each cover line is a short quoted string placed by position.

21. Tech Magazine Cover

A modern tech magazine cover. Masthead "CIRCUIT" in a bold monospace-inspired
sans, all-caps, top-left in bright lime #A3E635. A glossy 3D-rendered chip
floating centre. Cover lines "THE AI ISSUE" and "WHAT SHIPS NEXT" stacked
upper-right in a condensed uppercase sans in white, plus a small "No. 12" in
grey #9CA3AF. Background deep space black #05070D with faint circuit traces.
Sleek, futuristic editorial style. Composition as a tall two-to-three portrait
frame.

Best for: tech and startup mockups — the monospace-leaning masthead and lime accent hex read as a modern tech brand.

Typographic & text-as-art

Three prompts where the lettering is the artwork. FLUX.2's typography strength shines when the words carry material, depth, or motion.

22. 3D Inflated Balloon Lettering

Glossy 3D inflated balloon lettering spelling "YAY" in a rounded bubble
typeface, all-caps, centered and filling the frame, in candy pink #FF6FA5 with
soft studio reflections and a gentle shadow beneath. Background a flat pastel
mint #C8F5E4. Playful, tactile, 3D-render style with soft global illumination.
Composition as a square one-to-one frame.

Best for: celebration graphics and stickers — a single short word rendered as a glossy 3D material.

23. Double-Exposure Type Poster

A double-exposure typographic poster. The word "WILD" in a massive bold
sans-serif, all-caps, filling the frame, with a misty pine forest landscape
visible inside the letterforms. Background clean off-white #F2F0EB, the type in
deep forest green #1F3A2E. Minimal, artful, gallery-print style. Composition as
a tall two-to-three portrait frame.

Why it works: one bold word with imagery masked inside the letters — a classic effect FLUX.2 handles cleanly because the string is short.

24. Kinetic Overlapping Word Art

Kinetic typographic art. The word "MOMENTUM" repeated and overlapping in a
heavy extended sans-serif, all-caps, staggered diagonally across the frame to
suggest motion, in gradient tones from electric blue #3B82F6 to magenta #EC4899
on a flat black #0A0A0A background. Bold, energetic, contemporary poster style.
Composition as a square one-to-one frame.

Best for: cover art and brand posters — a single repeated word plus a two-hex gradient creates movement without any illustration. For turning any of these into a wordmark, see the 26 Flux prompts for logo design.

That's 24 prompts covering posters, ads, quote cards, story graphics, menus, magazine covers, and pure type. Copy any block, swap the quoted words and hex colors for your brand, and generate on [pro] or [max] for the sharpest text. For the parameter reference behind every choice here, keep the Flux prompt cheat sheet at hand, and browse the 40 best Flux prompts roundup for the rest of the cluster.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much text can FLUX.2 render reliably?

FLUX.2 has best-in-class typography, but accuracy still depends on length. Keep each text element short — a headline of one to five words, a subhead, and a date or price line all render cleanly. A dense paragraph of running body copy is where stray or misspelled characters creep in. Break long copy into a few short, separately quoted elements, name a font for each, and let the layout carry the hierarchy rather than asking for one big block of text.

Can I use JSON-structured prompts for exact text placement?

Yes. FLUX.2 [pro] accepts JSON-structured prompts that specify exact text positions, fonts, and styling, which is the most reliable way to pin down a multi-element layout like a poster or ad. Describe the scene in plain language, then include a small JSON block listing each text element with its content, position, font, weight, and color. It reads the structure and places each string where you asked instead of guessing the hierarchy.

How do I fix a single misspelled word in a Flux image?

Re-run the prompt with the exact corrected word wrapped in quotes and everything else described identically, or use image-to-image editing to change only that element. Because FLUX.2 does not support negative prompts, you fix errors by describing what you want, not what you don't: state the corrected string in quotes, keep the same font, weight, placement, and hex colors, and regenerate. Shortening the string or raising guidance toward 5–7 for a more literal read also helps the spelling land.

How do I get the exact font I want in Flux?

Name the font style and weight in the prompt and put that instruction near the start — for example "bold condensed grotesque sans-serif" or "high-contrast serif like a fashion masthead." Describing the class (geometric, humanist, slab, script, monospace) plus the weight and case gets you close even when a specific licensed typeface isn't matched exactly. For an exact brand face, add a reference image of the lettering; FLUX.2 combines up to 10 references, so you can feed the type sample alongside a logo and product shot.

Do hex color codes actually work in Flux prompts?

Yes. FLUX.2 reproduces exact hex codes, so writing #FF6B35 or #1B1B2F in the prompt gets you that precise color rather than an approximation. This makes it ideal for brand work — put your palette hexes directly on the background, headline, and accent elements. For strict, literal color adherence, use [pro] or [max], or raise guidance toward 5–7 on the [flex] tier so the model follows the palette closely.

Which FLUX.2 tier is best for text?

Use FLUX.2 [pro] for text and design work — it has the best text rendering and is the only tier that accepts JSON-structured prompts for exact placement. FLUX.2 [max] pushes typography fidelity even higher for print-quality posters. Reach for [flex] when you want to hand-tune steps and guidance for a stubborn layout, since it is the only tier that exposes those sliders. Avoid [klein] for anything text-heavy — it is distilled for speed and gives up quality that matters for legible type.

What aspect ratio and resolution should I use for a poster?

State the frame in words — for a standing poster use a two-to-three portrait frame; for social use a four-to-five portrait or nine-to-sixteen vertical frame; for banners use a sixteen-to-nine wide frame. FLUX.2 sets aspect ratio from width and height and outputs up to 4MP (2048×2048), with dimensions in multiples of 16. Around 2MP (roughly 1440–1536px on the long edge) is the recommended sweet spot; push toward 4MP for large-format print so small type stays crisp.

Does Flux support Midjourney-style flags or negative prompts?

No. FLUX.2 takes no --ar, --style, or --stylize flags and does not support negative prompts. You write everything as descriptive sentences: state the aspect ratio in words, name the font and hex colors inline, and describe exactly what you want in the frame. If an element keeps appearing that you don't want, describe the clean version you do want instead of trying to negate it.

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