Image Generation Nano Banana Nano Banana Comic Storyboard

3×3 cinematic storyboard contact sheet from one input image

A detailed Nano Banana Pro instruction prompt that analyzes one reference image and generates a coherent 3×3 cinematic contact sheet of the same subject with different shot types while keeping identity, clothing and lighting consistent.

March 1, 2026 Source: Nano Banana Pro Prompts by Community
3×3 cinematic storyboard contact sheet from one input image

Generated result using this prompt

The Prompt

Analyze the entire composition of the input image. Identify all key subjects present (whether a single person, group/couple, vehicle, or specific object) and their spatial relationships/interactions.
Generate a coherent 3×3 “contact sheet” grid that shows 9 different shots of exactly these subjects within the same environment.
You must adapt standard cinematic shot types to fit the content (for example, if it’s a group, keep the group together; if it’s an object, frame the entire object):
Row 1 (establishing the environment):
Extreme long shot (ELS): the subject appears small within a vast environment.
Long shot (LS): the full subject or group is visible from top to bottom (head to toe / wheels to roof).
Medium long shot (American shot / three-quarter): framed from above the knees (for people) or a 3/4 view (for objects).
Row 2 (core coverage):
4. Medium shot (MS): framed from the waist up (or the central core of an object). Focus on interaction/action.
5. Medium close-up (MCU): framed from the chest up. An intimate framing of the main subject.
6. Close-up (CU): tightly framed on the face or the “front” of the object.
Row 3 (details and angles):
7. Extreme close-up (ECU): intense focus on key features (eyes, hands, signs, textures) with macro-like detail.
8. Low-angle shot (worm’s-eye): look up at the subject from ground level (epic/heroic feeling).
9. High-angle shot (bird’s-eye): look down on the subject from above.
Ensure strict consistency: the same person/object, same clothing, and same lighting must appear in all 9 panels. Depth of field should vary realistically (with background blur in close-up shots).

Create a professional 3×3 cinematic storyboard grid with 9 panels.
The grid should present a specific subject/scene from the input image across a full range of focal lengths.
Top row: wide environmental shot, full-body view, 3/4 cropped (knees-up).
Middle row: waist-up view, chest-up view, face/front close-up.
Bottom row: macro details, low angle, high angle.
All frames must have photo-realistic textures, consistent cinematic color grading, and correct framing tailored to the number and type of subjects or objects being analyzed.

Parameters

aspect_ratio

16:9

quality

high

About This Prompt

A detailed Nano Banana Pro instruction prompt that analyzes one reference image and generates a coherent 3×3 cinematic contact sheet of the same subject with different shot types while keeping identity, clothing and lighting consistent.

Prompt Details

Analyze the entire composition of the input image. Identify all key subjects present (whether a single person, group/couple, vehicle, or specific object) and their spatial relationships/interactions. Generate a coherent 3×3 “contact sheet” grid that shows 9 different shots of exactly these subjects within the same environment. You must adapt standard cinematic shot types to fit the content (for example, if it’s a group, keep the group together; if it’s an object, frame the entire object): Row 1 (establishing the environment): Extreme long shot (ELS): the subject appears small within a vast environment. Long shot (LS): the full subject or group is visible from top to bottom (head to toe / wheels to roof). Medium long shot (American shot / three-quarter): framed from above the knees (for people) or a 3/4 view (for objects). Row 2 (core coverage): 4. Medium shot (MS): framed from the waist up (or the central core of an object). Focus on interaction/action. 5. Medium close-up (MCU): framed from the chest up. An intimate framing of the main subject. 6. Close-up (CU): tightly framed on the face or the “front” of the object. Row 3 (details and angles): 7. Extreme close-up (ECU): intense focus on key features (eyes, hands, signs, textures) with macro-like detail. 8. Low-angle shot (worm’s-eye): look up at the subject from ground level (epic/heroic feeling). 9. High-angle shot (bird’s-eye): look down on the subject from above. Ensure strict consistency: the same person/object, same clothing, and same lighting must appear in all 9 panels. Depth of field should vary realistically (with background blur in close-up shots).

Create a professional 3×3 cinematic storyboard grid with 9 panels. The grid should present a specific subject/scene from the input image across a full range of focal lengths. Top row: wide environmental shot, full-body view, 3/4 cropped (knees-up). Middle row: waist-up view, chest-up view, face/front close-up. Bottom row: macro details, low angle, high angle. All frames must have photo-realistic textures, consistent cinematic color grading, and correct framing tailored to the number and type of subjects or objects being analyzed.

Sample Image

3×3 cinematic storyboard contact sheet from one input image


Source: Nano Banana Pro Prompts Library | ID: 724

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Prompt Info

Type image
Model Nano Banana
Added 3/1/2026

Tags

Nano Banana Comic Storyboard Action

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