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Beginner8 min read

GPT Image 1.5: Core Concepts & Fundamentals

Master the basics of GPT Image 1.5 for production-quality visuals and controllable creative workflows

What is GPT Image 1.5?

GPT Image 1.5 is OpenAI's latest image generation model designed specifically for production-quality visuals and highly controllable creative workflows. Unlike previous models, GPT Image 1.5 excels at both generating new images from text and editing existing images with precision.

💡 Key Insight

GPT Image 1.5 represents a shift from "creative experimentation" to "production-ready workflows" - perfect for professional designers, marketers, and content creators who need consistent, high-quality results.

Core Capabilities

GPT Image 1.5 introduces several breakthrough capabilities that set it apart:

📸High-Fidelity Photorealism

Produces photorealistic images with natural lighting, accurate materials, and lifelike textures. Uses real-world knowledge to understand camera angles, depth of field, and lighting scenarios.

✍️Reliable Text Rendering

One of the most challenging aspects of image generation - GPT Image 1.5 can render text with crisp lettering, consistent layouts, and proper typography. Perfect for logos, posters, and infographics.

🎨Precise Style Control

Exceptional at understanding and transferring artistic styles. Can maintain consistent visual language across multiple images - crucial for brand identity and storytelling.

👤Facial & Identity Preservation

Robust face and identity preservation across edits. Can keep the same person recognizable across different scenes, outfits, and lighting conditions.

📊Complex Structured Visuals

Excels at creating infographics, diagrams, UI mockups, and other structured content with dense layouts and multiple elements working together cohesively.

Prompting Fundamentals

Success with GPT Image 1.5 depends on understanding these core prompting principles:

1. Structure Matters

Organize your prompts consistently for better results. Recommended structure:

Background → Subject → Details → Constraints

Example: "A modern office space (background), professional woman coding at desk (subject), natural window lighting, minimalist decor (details), photorealistic style (constraint)"

2. Specificity Wins

Be concrete about materials, textures, and visual medium. Generic quality descriptors often produce inconsistent results.

❌ Too Generic

"High quality beautiful scene"

✅ Specific

"Shot with 50mm f/1.8, golden hour lighting, shallow depth of field"

3. Use Camera Language for Photorealism

For photorealistic images, speak in photography terms:

  • Lens: "35mm lens", "telephoto", "wide angle"
  • Aperture: "f/2.8", "shallow depth of field", "bokeh effect"
  • Lighting: "golden hour", "soft diffused light", "dramatic side lighting"
  • Composition: "rule of thirds", "leading lines", "overhead shot"

Quality-Latency Tradeoffs

GPT Image 1.5 offers flexible quality settings to balance image fidelity with generation speed:

quality="low"

Fastest

Use for: Rapid prototyping, concept exploration, latency-sensitive workflows

Many use cases provide sufficient fidelity at this setting. Start here and upgrade only if needed.

quality="standard"

Balanced

Use for: Most production workflows, general content creation

Default setting that balances quality and speed for most use cases.

quality="high"

Highest Quality

Use for: Text-heavy content, dense layouts, final production assets

Essential for infographics, detailed diagrams, or when text rendering is critical.

Constraints Are Critical

The most important skill in GPT Image 1.5 is managing constraints - explicitly stating what should change and what must stay the same.

⚠️ Prevention is Key

Without explicit constraints, the model may gradually "drift" and change elements you wanted preserved. Repeat preservation requirements across iterations.

For Image Editing:

Always explicitly state what stays unchanged:

"Change the outfit to a red dress. Keep the face, hair, background, and lighting exactly the same."

For Iterative Generation:

Lock down established elements in each follow-up:

"Same character as before (woman with short black hair), same art style (watercolor), now in a different scene: sitting at a cafe"

Next Steps

Now that you understand the fundamentals, you're ready to explore specific use cases and applications.

📚 Continue Learning

  • Part 2: Use Cases & Practical Applications - Learn specific prompting patterns for infographics, photorealism, UI design, and more
  • Part 3: Advanced Techniques & Production - Master multi-image workflows, text handling, and iteration strategies