The Promptsref Tool Suite: Practical AI Utilities for Image + Video Creators
If you’re making AI images or short-form videos regularly, your real bottleneck usually isn’t “ideas”—it’s the messy middle: comparing models, editing consistently, turning outputs into postable formats, and extracting usable assets fast.
That’s exactly where PromptsRef Tools shines: it’s a set of lightweight, creator-first utilities that help you generate, transform, and repurpose content without jumping between five different apps.
Below is a friendly, hands-on tour of each tool—plus a few proven workflows you can steal.
The 9 tools at a glance
On the Tools page, you’ll find these utilities for image + video processing (I’ll go deeper on each one below): Video Motion Control, AI Image Generator, Multiple Angle Images (3×3 grid), Split Image Into Grid, AI Image Editor, Video Frame Extractor, Turn Grid to Video, Image to Prompt Generator, and a Midjourney Prompt Helper.
A quick way to think about them:
Create: generate images across multiple models, generate multi-angle grids
Transform: edit images via instructions, split grids into tiles, upscale tiles
Repurpose: extract frames, convert grids into short videos, reverse-engineer prompts
If you’ve ever thought “this prompt is good, but which model nails it best?”—this tool is for you.
It lets you generate in parallel across multiple models, compare outputs instantly, and download watermark-free images in one click.
Models available (as shown on the page): Nano Banana Pro, Grok Imagine, Z-image, Flux-2 Pro, Seedream 4.5, MJ, GPT Image 1.5.
Practical uses
Fast A/B testing for “best look” before you commit to a direction
Building consistent IP assets (characters / mascots) by iterating across models
Picking the right model for the job (e.g., product realism vs. artistic mood)
Pro tips
Start with one “neutral” prompt first, then add style words after you pick the best base model.
Use the aspect ratio options early (1:1, 9:16, 16:9, etc.) so you’re not judging crops.
Nice touch: the tool highlights “pay only for successful results” and watermark-free commercial-ready downloads on the page—great for creators who iterate a lot.
This is the “make my still image move like that video” tool.
You upload:
a photo (your character/image), and
a reference video (the motion you want), and it transfers the video’s motion/actions onto your image to generate a dynamic clip.
The page emphasizes that it can transfer full-body motion, complex multi-limb actions, and even hand & finger gestures, and it also mentions a motion library of trending references.
Practical uses
Turn one strong character image into a short, expressive “performance” clip
Recreate trending motion formats without animating manually
UGC-style ad shots: keep the same product/character, swap motions to test hooks
Pro tips
Choose a clean, readable subject image (clear silhouette, not too busy).
Pick reference videos where the gesture is obvious (hands/face in frame) for best transfer fidelity.
If you’re building a series: keep the same base image, swap reference motions—your output becomes “consistent format, fresh movement.”
This tool produces the now-classic 3×3 grid: nine variations of the same character/object from different angles/poses—great for both virality and actual production workflows.
The page spells it out: upload one image, generate a 3×3 grid, and you can download the grid or enhance individual cells to HD; it also notes the grid is automatically split into individual images.
Why creators love it
Social: grids “stop the scroll” because they’re high-density and invite taps/zooms
Production: instant “turnaround sheet” for character design, storyboards, and product angles
Pro tips
Use a reference image with one clear subject (avoid group photos).
If the tool outputs inconsistent subjects, the page suggests cropping and simplifying the input image.
This one is deceptively powerful: it splits a single image into a grid (like 3×3), and then lets you upscale tiles to HD.
It also mentions a very creator-y feature: upscale tiles while automatically removing borders and any text with one click.
Practical uses
“Split-to-thread” on X/Twitter: post the hook tile first, reveal the rest in replies
Instagram puzzle feed aesthetics
Zoom-in storytelling: split an artwork and let people explore details tile-by-tile
Pro tips
If you’re splitting AI grids (like a 3×3), this tool becomes your fastest “asset extractor.”
Upscaling tiles is great when you want one specific frame to be your hero image.
Sometimes you don’t want to regenerate—you want to keep the image and change something specific.
The Tools page positions AI Image Editor like this: upload an image, describe your changes, and the AI transforms it according to your instructions.
Practical uses
Fix small issues (hands, background clutter, logo placement, outfit tweaks)
Create variants for ads (“same image, different headline area / color / crop”)
Consistency work: keep identity, adjust styling
Pro tips
Give edits in priority order: “Keep X exactly, change Y, remove Z.”
When you want consistency, explicitly say what must remain unchanged (pose, face, outfit, logo).
If you work with video at all, you’ll end up needing frames: thumbnails, references, datasets, storyboards.
This tool extracts frames instantly and emphasizes: processing happens in your browser—no server upload required.
Key features listed include:
Extract to JPG/PNG
Interval-based extraction (every 1s / 2s / 5s, etc.)
Timestamp precision
Batch download as ZIP
Pro tips
Use interval extraction to quickly “scan” a long clip.
Use timestamp precision to grab “that one frame” for a cover image or reference.
This tool turns a grid image into a shareable video: each tile becomes a frame in sequence.
The page describes it as: upload grid images, split into frames, and combine into smooth videos; it supports multiple images and many grid formats.
It also calls out specific use cases:
2×2 for before/after and A/B testing
3×3 for product showcases, multi-model comparisons, and storyboards
Pro tips
If you post comparisons, this instantly makes your content “watchable” instead of “zoomable.”
Great hack: convert your 3×3 grid into a video, then post it as a Reel/Short.
This tool does what creators constantly need: turn an image into a usable prompt.
The page frames it as “Convert Image to Prompt” for inspiring your AI art, with a simple workflow: upload/select image → wait a few seconds → copy or modify the generated prompt.
Practical uses
Learn why an image works (composition, lighting, mood)
Build prompt templates from visuals you like
Convert references into a starting prompt, then stylize
Pro tip
Treat the output as a “base description.” Then add your own style layer (camera, lens, sref, lighting, era, etc.).
This one targets a real pain: beginners (and even pros) often know what they want, but get stuck assembling the prompt cleanly.
The page describes a prompt generator/helper with selectable keyword groups like view, camera, lighting, layout, enhance quality, aspect ratio, and --sref, plus buttons to copy or generate prompts with AI.
It also explains the core value: select keywords you need and they’re assembled for quick copying; AI can help generate prompts; it lowers the barrier for writing prompts.
Pro tips
Use it like a “prompt checklist”: view → camera → lighting → layout → quality → stylization.
Save your best prompt skeletons and reuse them as templates.
3 ready-to-use workflows (the “how creators actually use this” part)
Workflow A: Pick the best model fast, then package it for posting
Generate the same prompt across models in Multi-Model Image Generator
Pick the best output and refine with AI Image Editor
Create a 3×3 multi-angle grid for a high-density post
Split tiles (and upscale the best one) with Split Image Into Grid
Workflow B: Turn comparisons into videos (Shorts/Reels-friendly)
Make a 2×2 or 3×3 comparison grid (models / edits / angles)
Convert it with Turn Grid to Video
(Optional) Use Video Frame Extractor to grab the best frame for the cover
Workflow C: Still image → motion clip → reusable assets
Take your best character image
Transfer motion using Video Motion Control
Extract frames for thumbnails or prompts using Video Frame Extractor
Feed a selected frame into Image to Prompt to build a new prompt family
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