
Character Design Sheet / Turnaround Views
A professional character design sheet template — front/side/back turnaround views, expression heads, and prop callouts for a brass-masked sky-whale mechanic-priest. Perfect for concept art references and character sheets.
Character Design Sheet / Turnaround Views
A finished showcase of the Character Design Sheet image template — the kind of clean, multi-angle concept-art reference sheet character designers actually use, generated in one shot. This example depicts Orin, a brass-masked sky-whale mechanic-priest from the original fantasy-sci-fi world of Whale-Lantern City.
Raw Prompt
A seductive original fantasy-sci-fi world called Whale-Lantern City: a rain-soaked vertical harbor city built around sleeping sky whales, moonlit alleys, brass ritual machines, neon paper talismans, floating lantern drones, velvet shadows, and elegant East-Asian art nouveau details. Cinematic, premium, imaginative, social-media-worthy.
Create a professional character design sheet for Orin, a brass-masked sky-whale mechanic-priest. Include front, side, back views, expression heads, mechanical glove details, lantern tools, color swatches, fabric and brass callouts as visual markers only. Clean concept-art sheet, neutral background, highly usable design reference. No readable text, no watermark.
This must be a finished example artwork made with the template's output format, not a template explainer, not a tutorial, not a title card. Make it visually addictive for social media sharing.
Why This Prompt Works
The prompt does two jobs at once: it builds an entire miniature world (Whale-Lantern City) in one paragraph, then hands the character an unmistakable visual identity — "brass-masked," "sky-whale mechanic-priest" — that's specific enough for the model to stay consistent across every view on the sheet.
The explicit list of required elements (front/side/back, expression heads, glove details, color swatches) is what separates a usable design sheet from a pretty single illustration. Each of these is a distinct visual "slot" the model has to fill, forcing genuine multi-angle consistency rather than one flattering pose repeated four times.
The closing instruction — "not a template explainer, not a tutorial" — is a small but important guardrail: it tells the model to produce a finished deliverable, not a diagram about a design sheet.
Best Use Cases
- Original character (OC) design — lock down a character's silhouette, palette, and props before writing or illustrating further
- Game/comic concept art references — turnaround sheets are a standard pre-production asset
- Commission references — hand this sheet to an artist or another AI generation as a consistency anchor
- Worldbuilding portfolios — a single image that demonstrates both a character and a whole visual world
Style Notes
Neutral background, clean concept-art rendering, no readable text — designed to be a reference tool first, a pretty picture second. The brass/lantern/velvet palette reads as premium fantasy-industrial rather than generic fantasy.





