Start with the character, not the pages
Most AI storybooks break because the creator writes page prompts before deciding what must stay stable. If the child’s face, outfit, or age shifts across pages, the book feels improvised instead of authored.
A better workflow is to define a single anchor first: who the character is, what they wear by default, and what emotional tone should stay fixed unless a page explicitly changes it.
Write page beats instead of giant prompts
Long prompts make you feel productive, but they often introduce visual drift. In a book flow, short page beats work better because each spread only needs one job.
- State the scene change in one sentence.
- Keep recurring visual facts stable across pages.
- Reserve stylistic changes for rare, intentional moments.
Share like a finished project
The last mile matters. A storybook becomes easier to trust when it has a clean share page, clear cover, and a direct path to print or remix. That is what turns a private experiment into something people actually pass around.
