PromptBranding

Brand Visual Language Generator

Turn a brand brief into digital-first visual DNA: personality spectrums, color and type direction, imagery, and what to avoid before pixels.

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Tags

visual-designbrandingbrand-guidelinesvisual-identitymood-boardcolortypography

Prompt

Act as a Lead Visual Designer and brand strategist with 15+ years of experience building visual identities for digital-first products and consumer brands.

I need to develop a visual identity and brand language for the following:

Brand Context:
Brand / Product Name: [name]
What it does: [describe the product or service in 1-2 sentences]
Target Audience: [describe who this is designed for - demographics, psychographics, lifestyle]
Brand Personality (choose 3-5): [e.g., bold, playful, trustworthy, minimal, premium, approachable, technical, warm, disruptive]
Competitors or Visual References: [list brands or products that share the design space]
Brands to Differentiate From: [what should we NOT look like?]
Tone of Voice: [e.g., confident and direct / friendly and conversational / authoritative and calm]
Platform(s): [e.g., web app, iOS/Android app, marketing website, physical packaging]
Existing Assets to Respect: [logo, colors, or any locked brand elements]

Please generate a comprehensive visual language direction that includes:

Brand Essence Statement
One sentence that captures the soul of the brand visually (e.g., "Precision with warmth - like a trusted expert who speaks plainly")

Visual Personality Spectrum
Place the brand on 5 spectrums with a rationale for each:
- Minimal <-> Expressive
- Geometric <-> Organic
- Dark <-> Light
- Static <-> Dynamic
- Classic <-> Contemporary

Color Direction
- Primary palette recommendation: 1 hero color with emotional rationale
- Secondary palette: 2-3 supporting colors
- Functional colors: success, warning, error, info
- Describe the overall mood the palette creates and why it fits the brand
- Suggest 2-3 specific hex codes as a starting point with rationale

Typography Direction
- Recommend a type pairing (heading font + body font) with rationale
- Describe the typographic personality (e.g., "sharp serifs for authority, humanist sans for approachability")
- Suggest free (Google Fonts) and premium (Adobe Fonts / Fontsmith) options for each

Imagery & Illustration Style
- Photography direction: subject, lighting, color treatment, composition style
- Illustration style (if applicable): flat, isometric, 3D, line art, abstract, etc.
- Iconography style: filled, outlined, rounded, sharp, custom vs. library

Shape & Form Language
- What geometric language defines this brand? (e.g., rounded corners for approachability, sharp angles for precision)
- Any recurring motifs, patterns, or graphic devices

Mood Board Direction
- Describe 5-7 visual references I should pull for the mood board (describe the aesthetic, not specific brands)
- Explain what visual quality each reference contributes

What to Avoid
5 specific visual directions, trends, or aesthetics this brand should actively avoid and why

How to use

  1. 1Fill every bracket in Brand Context; paste competitor screenshots or short brand descriptions for sharper differentiation.
  2. 2Run once per major brand or sub-brand; refine with a second pass if stakeholders disagree on personality.
  3. 3Use the Visual Personality Spectrum in alignment so non-designers can discuss direction without only pointing at colors.
  4. 4Optional follow-up: ask for a one-paragraph creative brief for a freelance designer or illustrator based on this output.

Pro Tips

  • Pair with Brand Identity Design Brief when you also need applications (social, print) and implementation timelines.
  • Treat AI color and font picks as starting points: validate WCAG contrast and licensing before locking.
  • Run the What to Avoid list with your team - strategic markets sometimes intentionally break avoid rules.

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