Dial in a look with style presets

Style presets are one-tap looks you can stack in Studio. Each preset adds a tuned fragment for an aesthetic such as selfie, portrait, lighting, mood, or cinematic, and you can combine up to four. They give you a repeatable visual direction without rewriting the prompt from scratch each time.

Once you know the look you want, you should not have to retype it on every shot. Style presets in Studio package an aesthetic into a one-tap fragment you can apply and reuse, so a signature look becomes easy to repeat across a set. This guide covers what the presets are, how to stack them, and when to reach for them.

What a style preset adds

Each preset is a small, tuned addition to your prompt that nudges the result toward a particular aesthetic. Presets are grouped by category - selfie, portrait, scene, lighting, mood, processing, and cinematic among them - so you can find the direction you want quickly. Selecting one applies its look on top of whatever you wrote in your sections.

Stack a few, not a pile

  • Pick a base look first, such as a portrait or cinematic preset.
  • Layer a lighting or mood preset on top to shape the atmosphere.
  • Combine up to four presets so the styles complement rather than fight.
  • Drop a preset if a result feels overcooked - fewer, focused presets usually read cleaner.

Make a look you can repeat

The point of presets is repeatability. Once a combination gives you the feel you want, reapply the same presets on the next shot to keep a set visually coherent. Results can still vary between runs, so presets raise consistency rather than lock it, but they are the fastest way to carry a mood across a batch.

Try style presets in Studio