A high-end commercial prompt designed for a minimalist brand poster featuring a continuous line silhouette emerging from a realistic coffee cup against a vibrant red background.
Create a premium vertical brand poster for Nescafé, “Morning Muse Outline” edition, built around a minimalist composition where one real coffee cup becomes the visual origin of a continuous-line female profile. The poster must feel elegant, light, artistic, and emotionally refined, like a luxury coffee brand campaign with a poetic morning identity. The core visual idea is that the warmth and aroma of coffee draw a muse into existence through a single flowing outline line. Main composition: Use a pure highly saturated Nescé-red background with a perfectly clean, uncluttered studio look. Place one real premium coffee cup near the lower third of the frame, either in top view or with a slight angle that clearly shows the rich dark coffee inside. The cup must be rendered with extreme realism: smooth ceramic surface, realistic glossy coffee reflection, subtle crema or fine bubble detail near the rim, soft natural shadow, and delicate rising steam. The product must feel elegant, rich, and undeniably premium. Continuous-line muse logic: From the cup or its steam, a single continuous white line should rise and seamlessly transform into the side profile of a refined female face. The face should feel like a “morning muse”: graceful, calm, inspired, and softly awakened. The line should form forehead, nose, lips, chin, neck, and perhaps a simplified suggestion of closed eyes, lashes, or hair sweep, all with one clean fluid rhythm. The linework must feel light, confident, premium, and poetic, like a fashion illustration made from coffee aroma. It should not look like a random doodle or generic portrait; it must feel distinctly elegant and emotionally resonant. Female figure styling: The profile should evoke a modern muse rather than a detailed person. Keep it refined, slim, serene, and aspirational, with a sense of quiet morning beauty and inner inspiration. The line can suggest soft hair movement or a small feminine detail like a contour of lashes, cheek curve, or jawline, but everything must remain minimal. The expression should feel peaceful, reflective, and subtly awakened by the coffee below. Associated visual accents: Use only a few minimal supporting elements if needed: a tiny steam flourish, one or two delicate aroma curves, a subtle radiant note, or a small symbolic gesture that suggests clarity, inspiration, or early-morning thought. These accents must be secondary and extremely restrained so the cup and line portrait remain the dominant system. Branding and typography: Use English as the main title language. Integrate the Nescafé logo prominently in the upper area. Add a refined premium campaign headline such as: “MORNING MUSE” or “DRAWN BY AROMA” or “WAKE INTO INSPIRATION” Add a small elegant supporting line such as: “One cup. One muse.” or “Coffee that sketches the morning.” Typography must feel artistic, spacious, and premium, perfectly balanced with the line portrait. No clutter, no oversized commercial copy, no crude fonts. Lighting: Use polished commercial product lighting. The coffee cup must feel rich and tactile, with subtle specular highlights and realistic depth in the liquid. The white outline portrait should appear crisp and clean, softly floating with a premium print-like sharpness. The entire image must feel smooth, elegant, and expertly art-directed. Mood: poetic, elegant, feminine, inspired, minimal, aromatic, brand-forward, premium, refined, morning-fresh. Rendering style: hyper-realistic coffee product photography combined with elegant one-line continuous female profile illustration, premium minimalist brand poster, saturated red background, refined typography integration, polished advertising lighting, 8k, sharp but graceful finish. Negative prompt: messy background, cluttered design, low-detail coffee cup, random doodles, stiff line art, generic portrait, cheap poster styling, flat lighting, distorted branding, cartoon-heavy style, too many decorative elements, low-end coffee ad