
Location Fridge Magnet / Memento Magnet
A photorealistic souvenir fridge-magnet template — a tiny haunted seaside hotel with glowing windows, rendered as physical merch stuck on a fridge next to vacation photos and seashells.
Location Fridge Magnet / Memento Magnet
A finished example of the Location Fridge Magnet template — a genre-flexible format that turns any place from a story or world into a physical-feeling souvenir object, photographed as merchandise rather than illustrated as concept art.
Raw Prompt
Create a photorealistic souvenir fridge magnet shaped like a tiny haunted seaside hotel with glowing windows, pastel enamel, raised metal edges, stuck on a fridge beside vacation photos and seashells. Cute spooky merch photo. No readable text, no watermark.
This must be an actual finished output in the template's format, not a template introduction, not a tutorial, not a showcase card. Make it visually addictive, distinct from the other images, and suitable for social media sharing. Avoid unnecessary text.
Why This Prompt Works
The tension between "haunted" and "cute merch" is the whole idea — pastel enamel and raised metal edges are standard tourist-souvenir manufacturing details, applied to a subject (a haunted hotel) that would normally read as purely ominous. That contrast is what makes the image memorable instead of generic.
Staging it stuck on a fridge next to vacation photos and seashells rather than photographed alone on a white background is a small but important choice: it implies an entire domestic context and a person who owns this magnet, turning a product photo into a tiny piece of environmental storytelling.
Best Use Cases
- Worldbuilding merch mockups — visualize what tourist souvenirs from a fictional location might look like
- Location introduction posts — a cute, ownable object is a softer way to introduce a spooky or dramatic setting
- Product/merch concept design — genuinely usable as an early concept for real enamel-pin or magnet merchandise
- Series content — repeat the template for every notable location in a world to build a "souvenir set"
Style Notes
Photorealistic product photography, not illustration — enamel texture, raised metal edges, a lived-in fridge-door staging context. The "merch photo" framing is what sells the object as real rather than as concept art.





