Image-to-Image Polish
Upgrade to Journal-Cover Impact Style
Polish a scientific figure into a Science / Nature cover-style hero visual while keeping the data structure intact.
Prompt
Refine this scientific figure to achieve a Science or Nature journal-cover-style visual impact. Requirements: - Preserve the underlying scientific structure: data positions, axes, the relative regions and quantities. The figure must remain scientifically faithful. - Amplify visual storytelling: heightened contrast, dramatic but tasteful color grading, a sense of atmosphere or scale. - Use a clean, modern scientific palette: warm tones (crimson, amber) for high-risk / high-impact regions, cool tones (deep teal, indigo) for low-risk / baseline regions. - Improve clarity and spacing: legends and axis labels should remain present but understated. - Optional: add a subtle subject framing (e.g., a horizon line, a focal cell, a prominent peak) to anchor the eye. Do NOT: - Change quantitative values. - Remove labels or legends. - Add fictional features that did not exist in the source figure. Output: a publication-quality cover-candidate image, suitable for submission as a journal-cover concept.Use in Generator
When to use
When a figure has been accepted and you want to submit a cover-image candidate version.
Variations
Editorial illustration variant
Re-imagine the figure as a flat-design editorial illustration in the style of Quanta Magazine: simplified geometric shapes, restrained 3-color palette, minimal but striking composition.
Tips
- Always say "preserve scientific structure". Cover-style edits routinely drift toward fiction.
- Specify which palette mood (warm/cool) maps to which semantics. Otherwise, color choices are arbitrary.
- Keep legends and labels present but understated. Cover-style without legends loses scientific credibility.
FAQ
Can I get a vertical (portrait) format for a cover?
Add "Output aspect ratio: 3:4 portrait, suitable for journal cover layout" and the model will recompose accordingly.
