
Create a medical and scientific illustration, stylized human cell cross-section with glowing organelles, clean educational 3D render, blue and teal palette, no labels, no text, no logo, no watermark
Create this lookCreate medical and scientific illustrations concepts with clear subject details, style references, lighting, camera angle, composition, and brand-safe constraints. Generate careful educational science visuals, medical explainer art, lab concepts, and non-diagnostic illustration directions.

Create a medical and scientific illustration, stylized human cell cross-section with glowing organelles, clean educational 3D render, blue and teal palette, no labels, no text, no logo, no watermark
Create this lookCreate a laboratory research illustration, microscope, glassware, and abstract molecular structures floating in soft light, accurate but non-diagnostic, no readable text, no logo, no watermark
Create this look

Create a scientific anatomy-inspired visual, translucent heart model made of light particles, dark blue background, respectful educational style, no labels, no text, no watermark
Create this lookIt is a free image generator workflow that turns a short idea into a detailed medical & scientific illustrations prompt with subject, style, lighting, camera angle, and composition cues.
Start with the exact subject, then add use case, visual style, materials, color palette, lighting, camera angle, and what to avoid such as readable text, logos, or watermarks.
Yes. Each prompt can specify studio lighting, natural daylight, macro depth of field, cinematic wide angle, flat lay, poster layout, product shot, or editorial framing.
Use them for concept art, campaign drafts, product mockups, website heroes, social thumbnails, posters, decks, and other visual planning where you need original imagery.
You can use the prompts as creative direction, but you should review generated outputs for rights, brand safety, privacy, and any third-party restrictions before publishing.
Open Seele AI workspace, start from a prompt, and keep iterating the visual direction until it feels ready to use.