Amir Mushich introduces a 4-phase Nano Banana 2 brand-poster prompt
A shared Nano Banana 2 template breaks branded poster generation into brand analysis, photo zone, graphic zone, and photography direction, then auto-resolves colors, slogans, and hero products. The format is being applied to sneaker, fashion, and sports-brand layouts.

TL;DR
- Amir Mushich posted a reusable Nano Banana 2 prompt that turns branded poster generation into a rigid four-part workflow: brand analysis, canvas layout, photo zone, and graphic zone direction Mushich intro Full prompt.
- The prompt auto-resolves seven brand variables before image generation starts, including dominant brand color, logo mark, hero subject, campaign line, and the real-world environment for the shot Full prompt.
- Its core compositional trick is a two-zone 4:5 poster where the subject breaks out of the top photo area and overlaps the flat-color lower panel Full prompt.
- Other creators immediately started adapting the format for Adidas, Levi's, Gucci, and Lacoste style layouts, which suggests the template is portable across fashion and sports brands Brand campaign examples Amir reply.
You can access Nano Banana 2 inside LTX Studio, and the LTX help center currently lists it as live alongside LTX-2.3 and Kling 2.6 Pro. Mushich also links the prompt drop back to LTX Studio, which frames this more like a working creative template than a one-off viral image post.
Brand intelligence system
The first move is not styling, it is parameter resolution. Mushich tells Nano Banana 2 to infer seven inputs before rendering anything:
- Brand color
- Secondary contrast color
- Logo mark
- Hero subject
- Campaign line
- Photo environment
- Vertical side text
That up-front structure is the useful bit. It turns a vague "make me a branded poster" request into a checklist the model can keep consistent across different brands.
Two-zone poster layout
The layout spec is unusually strict for a social prompt share. The canvas is fixed to a 4:5 poster, with roughly 60 percent reserved for action photography and 40 percent for a flat graphic block Full prompt.
The lower panel gets the logo, slogan, side text, and credit line. The subject has to cross the cut line and physically enter that lower zone, which is why the examples read more like campaign comps than ordinary product shots.
Sketch-heavy brand variations
The follow-on examples bend the same system in a slightly different direction. Instead of the hard editorial-photo split from Mushich's original prompt, they mix live-action figures with oversized sketched brand objects: an Adidas Superstar, Levi's jeans, a Gucci tote, and a Lacoste racket.
That gives the format a second life as a fast concepting tool for campaign art direction. Keep the brand color, keep the logo placement, swap the hero prop, and the layout still holds.
Access and prompt packaging
Mushich says he would normally charge $3,000 to $5,000 for work like this, then bundles the prompt with 60-plus free assets in the same thread Workflow packaging. That matters because the post is selling a workflow package, not only a prompt.
The official context is also clear enough. LTX Studio has a dedicated Nano Banana 2 overview, an older Nano Banana prompt guide, and a help center page saying Nano Banana 2 is already live in the product. For creative teams, the interesting part is how quickly a rigid prompt template is turning into a shareable mini art-direction system.