Create a realistic luxury product wristshot inside a vintage car, featuring a polished metal watch with detailed dial, leather strap, hand on steering wheel, warm dashboard light, shallow depth of field, and premium lifestyle product photography.
01
Product images need structure
Product photography prompts have a narrow job: make the product easy to inspect, desirable, and visually consistent. A good template protects those goals by keeping the product clear, the lighting intentional, and the background useful rather than distracting.
Start with the product as the main slot. Add slots for setting, surface, lighting, color palette, and usage context. Keep the composition instructions stable: product position, camera angle, background depth, and whether the image should leave room for copy or branding.
02
Build the base prompt first
A strong base prompt might define a centered product hero shot, controlled studio lighting, realistic material rendering, clean shadows, and a background that matches the brand. The variables then decide which product appears and what environment supports it.
Avoid turning every adjective into a slot. Too many variables make the template harder to use. The useful slots are the ones a marketer, designer, or founder would naturally change between campaigns.
03
Add controls for visual direction
Look controls are especially useful for product photography. Palette can shift between premium monochrome, playful pastel, and natural earth tones. Lighting can shift between soft studio, hard flash, golden hour, and dramatic rim light. Material controls help when the product is glass, metal, textile, ceramic, or plastic.
Once the template works, attach a preview image and expose a JSON endpoint. That makes the template useful to search engines, AI tools, and other image platforms. The prompt stays visible, and the structure becomes portable.



