Master batch generation workflows to produce large volumes of fashion content efficiently. Covers prompt templates, variable systems, session planning, and post-batch curation for maximum output quality.
When you need to produce a large volume of fashion content, such as an entire product catalog, a multi-look campaign, or a seasonal social media library, efficiency becomes as important as quality. Batch workflows let you generate dozens or hundreds of fashion images in a structured, systematic way, maintaining consistency while maximizing your creative output per hour and per credit.
A batch workflow is a structured approach to generating multiple related fashion images in a single focused session. Instead of creating images one at a time with unique prompts, you develop a prompt template, define variables (outfits, colors, backgrounds, poses), and systematically generate all variations. This approach ensures visual consistency across the entire batch while dramatically reducing the time spent on prompt writing and model selection.
Determine exactly how many images you need, what types (full body, detail, lifestyle), and for which products or looks. A clear scope prevents scope creep and wasted credits. Example: "24 product images for the Spring collection, 8 looks x 3 angles each".
Write a master prompt that includes your style anchor and all consistent elements (model, lighting, setting). Leave placeholders for variables. Example: "A confident woman wearing [OUTFIT VARIABLE], in a [SETTING VARIABLE], warm golden natural light, editorial fashion photography, shot on medium format, [STYLE ANCHOR]".
Create a spreadsheet or list of all outfit descriptions, settings, and any other elements that change between images. This variable list becomes your production checklist.
For batch work, Flux 2 Pro offers the best balance of quality, speed, and credit cost. It generates quickly enough for high-volume sessions while maintaining professional quality. Reserve Kontext Max or Kling o3 for hero images selected from the batch.
Batch Prompt Template Example:
Base: "A [CHARACTER] wearing [OUTFIT], standing [POSE] in [SETTING],
[LIGHTING], editorial fashion photography, [STYLE ANCHOR]"
Variables:
OUTFIT_1: "a tailored navy wool blazer over a white silk blouse"
OUTFIT_2: "a slouchy camel cashmere sweater with leather leggings"
OUTFIT_3: "a structured emerald satin midi dress with side slit"
SETTING_1: "a minimalist white studio"
SETTING_2: "a sunlit Mediterranean terrace"
POSE_1: "with one hand in pocket, weight on left foot"
POSE_2: "mid-stride, looking over shoulder"Work through your variable list systematically, substituting each variable into your template and generating. Generate 2-3 variations of each combination to give yourself selection options. Keep a running tally of your progress against the scope to ensure complete coverage.
Session Efficiency
Block dedicated time for batch generation. A focused 2-3 hour session with no interruptions produces more and better results than scattered generation throughout a week. Batch sessions develop creative momentum: your prompt refinement improves with each generation, and the AI model stays "warm" in terms of your style context.
After generating your entire batch, review all images together. This holistic view reveals inconsistencies, identifies the strongest outputs, and highlights any gaps that need additional generation. Select the best variation of each planned image, then run the selected set through the post-production pipeline (Make Realistic and upscale).
Batch Efficiency Numbers
A well-executed batch workflow produces 3-5x more usable images per hour than ad-hoc generation. The template approach reduces prompt writing time by 70%, and the systematic variable substitution ensures no planned image is missed.
Volume without consistency is noise. Batch workflows give you both: the volume your marketing calendar demands and the consistency your brand requires.
— Fittins AI Team
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