Think in Body Mechanics, Not Style
Before anything else, decide what the body is doing.
• where the weight sits
• which side is active
• whether the body is balanced or off balance
• what direction the torso and head are facing
If that’s unclear, the output will be vague. Nano Banana Pro responds best to believable human mechanics. Bent joints feel relaxed. Straight lines feel tense. Broken symmetry implies motion.
Style comes later.

One Pose Idea at a Time
Nano Banana Pro works best when the pose is simple and singular.
Avoid stacking actions.
Instead of trying to describe everything, lock in one clear action.
• standing casually
• seated, leaning forward
• walking, mid step
Add one modifier if needed. That’s usually enough. The system handles the rest.
Over prompting reduces clarity.
Framing Is Part of the Instruction
Framing is not an afterthought. It directly affects how a pose reads.
Close frame
Good for subtle posture and expression.
Medium frame
Best for most character work. You see intent clearly.
Wide frame
Use this when movement or environment matters.
If the pose feels weak, the frame is often the issue.
Character Placement Matters
Nano Banana Pro centers characters by default. That’s fine, but intentional placement creates stronger results.
Use simple positioning cues.
• subject slightly off center
• character framed to the left
• space in front of the character’s gaze
This creates direction and balance. It also makes motion and posture feel purposeful instead of static.
Don’t Overcorrect the Model
If the system keeps drifting away from a pose, don’t fight it immediately.
Recheck the logic.
Is the pose physically believable.
Is the action too complex.
Is the framing working against it.
Most fixes come from simplifying, not adding more detail.
How We Recommend Using It
Clear pose idea.
Simple language.
Frame chosen with intent.
When those align, Nano Banana Pro does the heavy lifting.
That’s the workflow we design for.