The image studio designers actually want.
Ship editorial portraits, product hero shots, and full brand campaigns without the AI-generic look. Mona respects your composition, protects your typography space, and locks your palette across every render — so what leaves the studio matches what you pitched in the deck.
- Editorial-grade portraits with real skin texture, pores and studio lighting
- Style consistency via reference image upload — art-direct once, reuse forever
- Brand themes lock palette, mood, and voice across every generation
- Streaming previews — watch the render evolve, kill it early, iterate 10× faster
- Export-ready 4K with clean composition space for headlines and logos
- Prompt library so winning directions become reusable presets, not lucky one-offs
Real renders from the studio
Every image on this page was generated in Mona. No stock photos, no retouching, no photoshoots.
Four steps, one afternoon
Describe or paste a moodboard
Write one line or upload a reference. Mona reads composition, lighting and palette — not just keywords.
Refine, don't restart
Regenerate variations that stay on-direction. Change light, angle, or focal length without losing the concept.
Lock your brand theme
Save palette, typography voice and mood once. Every future render obeys the system — no drift across a campaign.
Export to your stack
Drop 4K PNGs straight into Figma, Photoshop or your CMS. Metadata and prompt history stay intact.
Built for how you actually work
Editorial covers
Magazine-grade portraits with real texture — no plastic AI face.
Brand campaigns
Full visual systems locked to one palette, mood and typography space.
Pitch decks
Concept visuals that make a slide feel like a shipped campaign.
Product hero shots
Studio-lit product renders without booking a photographer.
Social content
On-brand square, story and reel visuals in minutes, not days.
Client-safe outputs
Ownership stays yours. Nothing is trained on your prompts.
“It's the first AI tool that respects my art direction. I stop fighting the model and start directing it.”