What is a style preset?
A style preset is a simple way to add visual direction to an AI image prompt. Instead of typing the same style words repeatedly, you choose a preset such as Fashion, Anime, Cinematic, Photo, Illustration, or 3D Render. The preset then helps steer the image toward that kind of look.
A preset does not replace your prompt. Your prompt still matters most. The preset works like an extra layer of guidance that supports the subject, setting, lighting, and mood you already described.
a cozy reading room with a wooden bookshelf, warm window light, indoor plants, peaceful atmosphere
a cozy reading room with a wooden bookshelf, warm window light, indoor plants, peaceful atmosphere
Automatically added style direction:
digital illustration, painterly, concept art, soft shading
The second version keeps the same subject and scene, but the preset adds a stronger visual direction. This can make the result feel more consistent without making the user prompt long or repetitive.
How Kuvagen uses style presets
In Kuvagen, the selected style can add two kinds of guidance: positive style direction and negative style guidance. Positive style direction is added to the main prompt. Negative style guidance is added to the negative prompt, together with basic quality guidance.
User prompt:
a futuristic city street at night, wet pavement, neon reflections
Selected style:
Cinematic
Automatically added style direction:
cinematic lighting, film still, dramatic composition, shallow depth of field
Automatically applied negative guidance:
cartoon, anime, illustration, low quality, worst quality, blurry, watermark, text
This means your own words stay important. The preset simply adds extra direction after your prompt. If you type a custom negative prompt, that custom negative prompt is also combined with the style-specific and basic negative guidance.
Available style presets
Kuvagen currently offers a small set of broad presets. They are intentionally general, so they can work across many subjects without requiring you to know technical prompt vocabulary.
Use this when you want the prompt itself to decide the look. No extra style direction is added.
Useful for editorial portrait, clothing, model-like, or magazine-inspired images.
Adds direction such aseditorial fashion photography, high-end fashion magazine, professional studio lighting
Useful for clean illustrated character-like images, colorful key visuals, and cel-shaded looks.
Adds direction such asanime style, key visual, cel shading, vibrant colors, clean lineart
Useful when you want a dramatic film-like image with strong composition and depth.
Adds direction such ascinematic lighting, film still, dramatic composition, shallow depth of field
Useful when you want a more realistic camera-like image with natural detail.
Adds direction such asphotorealistic, DSLR, 85mm, natural skin texture, high detail
Useful for painterly scenes, concept art, soft visual storytelling, and non-photographic images.
Adds direction such asdigital illustration, painterly, concept art, soft shading
Useful for object renders, toy-like scenes, polished product visuals, and clean 3D compositions.
Adds direction such as3d render, octane render, global illumination, sharp focus
How to choose the right preset
The easiest way to choose a preset is to ask what kind of image you expect before you generate. If you imagine a camera photo, choose Photo. If you imagine a movie still, choose Cinematic. If you imagine a painted or drawn image, choose Illustration or Anime. If you imagine a polished computer-generated object or scene, choose 3D Render.
Choose Photo for:
realistic portraits, natural scenes, camera-like images
Choose Cinematic for:
dramatic lighting, film-like scenes, atmospheric compositions
Choose Illustration for:
concept art, fantasy scenes, painterly interiors, soft drawn images
Choose Fashion for:
editorial portraits, clothing-focused images, studio-style lighting
Choose Anime for:
cel-shaded, colorful, key visual style images
Choose 3D Render for:
polished objects, stylized rooms, product-like scenes, clean 3D visuals
If you are unsure, start with Default. A strong prompt with Default is often better than choosing a preset that fights against your idea.
Write the prompt first, then choose the style
A style preset should support the image idea, not hide a weak prompt. Start with a clear subject and setting. Then choose the style that best matches the result you want.
cool scene
a lone astronaut walking through a quiet desert at sunset, long shadows, distant mountains
After writing the clearer prompt, a style preset can shape the final look. Cinematic may make it feel like a film still. Illustration may make it feel like concept art. Photo may make it feel more realistic.
Avoid style conflicts
Style conflicts happen when the prompt and preset ask for different visual directions at the same time. For example, if you choose Photo but write “watercolor illustration” in the prompt, the model receives mixed signals. Sometimes this creates an interesting hybrid, but it can also make the result less predictable.
Style: Photo
Prompt: a watercolor illustration of a small seaside town
Style: Illustration
Prompt: a small seaside town, soft watercolor feeling, warm afternoon light
A good rule is to keep the preset and the style words in your prompt pointed in the same direction. If you choose a strong preset, you can usually keep your own style words simple.
How presets affect negative guidance
Some presets also discourage conflicting styles. For example, the Photo preset discourages terms such as CGI, render, illustration, and anime. The Illustration preset discourages photographic terms. The Cinematic preset discourages cartoon, anime, and illustration. This helps the selected style stay more focused.
Photo preset negative guidance:
cgi, render, illustration, anime, low quality, worst quality, blurry, watermark, text
Illustration preset negative guidance:
photo, photorealistic, film still, low quality, worst quality, blurry, watermark, text
3D Render preset negative guidance:
photo, film grain, low quality, worst quality, blurry, watermark, text
You do not need to repeat these automatically applied terms yourself. Use the optional negative prompt only for extra things that are specific to the current image, such as unwanted objects, unwanted backgrounds, or unwanted composition details.
Example workflows
Fashion portrait
Prompt:
a stylish person wearing a futuristic silver coat, standing on a neon-lit city street at night, wet pavement reflections, confident pose
Style:
Fashion
Why it works:
The prompt describes the subject, clothing, setting, and pose. The preset adds editorial fashion direction and studio-like lighting guidance.
Fantasy environment
Prompt:
a fantasy castle on a floating island above the clouds, waterfalls, distant mountains, sunset lighting, warm golden sky
Style:
Illustration
Why it works:
The prompt defines the scene clearly. The preset supports a painterly concept-art look.
Realistic travel-like image
Prompt:
a quiet mountain road after rain, pine trees, low clouds, natural morning light, realistic atmosphere
Style:
Photo
Why it works:
The prompt asks for a real-world scene, and the Photo preset supports a camera-like result.
A simple style preset workflow
- Write the main subject and setting first.
- Choose the preset that matches the visual format you want.
- Keep your own style words simple if the preset already covers them.
- Use the preview tags to check the selected style, size, steps, seed, and visibility before generating.
- Generate once, then change only one thing at a time: prompt, style, steps, shape, or seed.
This workflow makes it easier to understand what changed. If you change the prompt, preset, resolution, shape, and seed all at once, it is harder to tell which setting improved the image.
Final tips
Style presets are best used as helpers. They make prompting faster, but they do not remove the need for a clear idea. Start with a specific subject, add a setting and mood, then choose the style preset that supports the image you already have in mind.
When in doubt, use Default first. Then try one preset at a time and compare the results. Over time, you will learn which presets fit your favorite kinds of images.