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NanoBiBi
Feb 5, 20254 min read

Quickstart: Generate with a Maker Model

Follow a three-step checklist to select a Maker model, set core parameters, and create your first output in under five minutes.

Maker EditorQuickstart

Why This Quickstart Matters

Maker models bundle tuned prompts, output controls, and credit pricing so you can create high-quality assets without a long setup. This quickstart shows the essential actions required to move from blank canvas to a finished image or video.

Step 1 · Choose a Model

  1. 1

    Open the model selector

    In Maker, click the model name in the right panel to open the selector with available creation types.

  2. 2

    Filter by modality

    Use the tabs to align with your output goal—image, video, or audio. Each tile lists the supported resolution and credit cost.

  3. 3

    Confirm the default preset

    Hover over the model to see the preset prompt and style notes so you understand the baseline look before generating.

Step 2 · Configure Key Parameters

  1. 1

    Write a focused prompt

    Describe the subject, environment, and tone in one or two sentences. Keep wording direct to ensure predictable outputs.

  2. 2

    Adjust resolution and outputs

    Set the target size and number of variations. Start with one output at the recommended resolution to conserve credits.

  3. 3

    Review advanced settings

    Optional controls like guidance scale, steps, or seed help you refine results. Leave defaults in place for the first run.

Step 3 · Generate and Review

  1. 1

    Click Generate

    Maker queues the request and displays real-time status in the preview panel.

  2. 2

    Evaluate the output

    Use zoom to check details. If the result fits the brief, star it or download immediately from the preview card.

  3. 3

    Iterate if needed

    Modify one parameter at a time—prompt wording, resolution, or model choice—to quickly reach the desired look.

Key Takeaways
  • Pick the model that matches your modality before writing prompts.
  • Start with recommended defaults and adjust only one parameter per iteration.
  • Save winning configurations as presets for reuse in future Maker sessions.

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