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NanoBiBi
Feb 20, 202512 min read

Maker Editor Workflow Guide

Master the Maker workspace for every creative modality. Learn how to move from model selection to preview, approvals, and downloads for Text to Image, Image to Image, Text to Video, Text to Audio, and Image to Video.

Maker EditorWorkflow

Get to Know the Maker Workspace

The Maker workspace is NanoBiBi's all-in-one creation surface. The left rail manages project folders, presets, and Effect shortcuts. The central canvas or player renders live previews, while the right panel hosts prompts, reference inputs, and advanced parameters.

Every session follows a repeatable loop: define the objective, choose a model, tune prompts and controls, launch the generation, audit the results, and archive or download the approved assets. Keeping that sequence in mind makes each modality predictable.

Tips
  • Use preset styles supplied in each model schema to reload preferred settings in one click.
  • Need to export everything? Click Download All in the preview header to bundle every completed result.

Text to Image

Text to Image is the fastest path to campaign hero visuals, product mockups, and concept art. Pair a model with an Effect, then provide a prompt that covers subject, composition, and atmosphere.

  1. 1

    Choose a model

    Open the model selector and pick a diffusion or fine-tuned model that suits your brand palette. Hover cards show example outputs and credit cost.

  2. 2

    Compose the prompt

    Describe the subject, camera angle, and styling details in English for maximum precision. Add supporting notes for brand tone or required elements.

  3. 3

    Adjust controls

    Set resolution, guidance scale, steps, and output count. Start with the recommended defaults, then iterate on one control per run to understand its impact.

  4. 4

    Add references when needed

    Upload guides, logos, or brand color swatches in the reference inputs to steer composition and keep assets on-brand.

  5. 5

    Generate and evaluate

    Run the creation, review each tile in the preview panel, and star the versions worth keeping before downloading or storing them in a project folder.

Tips
  • Increase the number of outputs to capture multiple variations from a single prompt.
  • Add negative prompts such as "low contrast" or "watermark" to filter recurring issues.

Image to Image

Image to Image lets you restyle or iterate on an existing asset while preserving layout. It is ideal for product recolors, wardrobe swaps, or seasonal refreshes.

  1. 1

    Import the base asset

    Drop the source file onto the canvas or upload it through the input panel. Maker creates a non-destructive layer so you can revert at any time.

  2. 2

    Control strength

    Use the strength slider to define how much of the original structure should stay intact. Lower values drive stronger prompt influence; higher values focus on gentle retouching.

  3. 3

    Mask specific areas

    Activate the masking brush to target only the region that needs to change. Unmasked areas remain untouched, so branding stays consistent.

  4. 4

    Preview multiple variations

    Request several outputs per run or duplicate the prompt with small tweaks, then compare results side by side in the preview panel.

Tips
  • Combine Image to Image with an Effect template to keep lighting and color grading aligned to your brand playbook.
  • When editing portraits, reduce guidance scale to preserve identity and expression.

Text to Video

Use Text to Video when you need animated explainers, motion teasers, or concept reels. Motion quality depends on clear instructions about subject, movement, and environment.

  1. 1

    Select a video model

    Pick a video-capable model from the selector and review its supported aspect ratios, duration range, and credit cost before running a batch.

  2. 2

    Describe the scene and motion

    Write a prompt that covers the setting, camera movement, and subject action. Short, direct sentences translate best to motion cues.

  3. 3

    Configure duration and aspect ratio

    Set frame count or seconds and choose the target orientation such as 16:9, 1:1, or 9:16. Stay inside the recommended limits for the smoothest output.

  4. 4

    Optional: add a reference frame

    When the model supports it, upload a still frame or brand key visual to anchor the opening composition and color palette.

  5. 5

    Generate and inspect playback

    Review the rendered clip in the built-in player, checking for motion artifacts and brand fidelity before downloading or sharing.

Tips
  • If the clip looks jittery, reduce duration or simplify the motion instructions before regenerating.
  • Loop playback inside the preview to confirm transitions feel continuous prior to export.

Text to Audio

Convert scripts into voice-overs, explainers, and sonic branding. Text to Audio models ship with multiple languages and voice profiles.

  1. 1

    Pick a voice profile

    Choose the language, gender, and tonal profile provided by the selected model. Preview snippets to confirm pronunciation and pacing.

  2. 2

    Prepare the script

    Break long paragraphs into short sentences and add stage directions such as [pause] or tone cues to guide delivery.

  3. 3

    Fine-tune pacing

    Adjust speaking rate, emphasis, and volume controls so the narration matches your video timing or brand persona.

  4. 4

    Generate and review

    Play the result inside Maker, mark the best take, and relaunch with small adjustments if emphasis needs refining.

  5. 5

    Download in the right format

    Export as WAV for editing workflows or MP3 for instant publishing. Metadata automatically stores the prompt and model reference.

Tips
  • Insert paragraph breaks to create natural pauses; Maker respects line breaks during synthesis.
  • Keep multiple takes by starring outputs and renaming them in the preview panel.

Image to Video

Image to Video animates a still frame into a short motion sequence. It works well for product turntables, hero art reveals, and kinetic social posts.

  1. 1

    Upload the hero frame

    Provide the high-resolution image that should open the animation. Clean backgrounds prevent stretching artifacts.

  2. 2

    Set motion intensity

    Adjust animation strength or camera path sliders to define how dynamic the motion should feel.

  3. 3

    Keep key elements stable

    When available, apply masking or subject lock controls so logos, packaging, or characters stay anchored while the background animates.

  4. 4

    Generate alternative cuts

    Trigger multiple runs with different motion settings, then pick the smoothest option for export.

Tips
  • Maintain lighting consistency with the source visual to avoid flicker between frames.
  • Enable loop preview in the player to ensure the clip can repeat seamlessly.

Preview and Delivery

Every generation appears in the Maker preview panel with status tags and quick actions. Use the zoom controls to inspect fine details before marking approvals.

Download options include individual files or the Download All button, which bundles every completed variation into a single archive for handoff.

  • Use the expand icon on any result to inspect quality at full resolution.
  • Rename outputs in the preview panel to match campaign naming conventions before exporting.

Troubleshooting and Optimization

When results diverge from the target, investigate prompt clarity, model choice, parameter ranges, and reference inputs—in that order.

  • Blurry or noisy images: increase resolution and steps or switch to a higher fidelity model.
  • Colors drifting off-brand: apply an Effect template or add reference swatches in the control panel.
  • Video wobble or artifacts: shorten duration, reduce motion strength, or regenerate with a simplified description.
  • Audio mispronunciations: add phonetic hints in parentheses and keep sentences under twenty words.
Pro tip

Once you land on a repeatable configuration, save it as a preset or publish an Effect template so the same settings are one click away next time.

Key Takeaways
  • Follow the Maker loop: select the model, tune inputs, generate, review, and deliver.
  • Create variations with presets, reference inputs, and masking controls to stay precise across modalities.
  • Capture winning settings as presets or Effects so teams can reuse them inside Maker and Bulk workflows.

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