Use the GPT Image workspace for text-to-image and image-to-image tasks. The experience is framed around GPT Image 2, with a transparent fallback to GPT Image 1.5 for live generation today.
Best suited for prompts that need text rendering, realistic visual tone, structured layouts, and stronger prompt alignment.
No Images Generated
This workspace is designed for prompts that need both visual quality and semantic precision, especially when layout, text, or reference-led refinement matter.
Useful for posters, hero sections, UI frames, and concepts where readable text inside the image matters.
Good for compositions that need visual hierarchy, labels, overlays, cards, interface elements, or infographic logic.
Aim for prompts that need believable lighting, stronger material handling, and cleaner screenshot-like presentation.
Upload a source image and use image-to-image when you want refinement, not just a brand-new composition.
The create experience stays centered on GPT Image 2, and each run makes the live generation path explicit before you continue.
The create page, examples, and defaults are all organized around GPT Image 2 so the product experience stays consistent.
When a run needs to switch to GPT Image 1.5, the UI asks for confirmation first so the runtime is explicit.
You keep the same prompt flow, editing surface, and image-to-image tools instead of switching to a separate product.
The strongest prompts are explicit about subject, visual framing, text content, hierarchy, and what should remain unchanged.
Start with subject, setting, camera framing, or composition before layering in styling details.
If you need a headline, label, button, or caption, say exactly what the text should read and where it should appear.
Ask for cards, labels, maps, interface blocks, or infographic groupings when the layout matters as much as the art direction.
For image-to-image, upload the strongest reference you have and tell the model what to preserve and what to change.
Good prompting improves results, but the create flow is also transparent about what affects quality and how to get more usable drafts.
Clear composition, text, and style instructions usually outperform vague aesthetic-only prompts.
For image-to-image tasks, stronger source images make it easier to preserve identity, structure, and scene logic.
Treat the first result as a draft, then tighten the prompt or change the reference rather than throwing the workflow away.
These questions are meant to remove friction before someone starts a run: what works best, what the fallback means, and how to get stronger outputs.