AI Made Simple

AI Made Simple

7 Nano Banana Pro Workflows That Actually Save You Hours (Not Just “Make Art”)

A practical breakdown of 7 real use cases that show how far visual AI has come.

Nitin Sharma's avatar
Nitin Sharma
Dec 01, 2025
∙ Paid

If you have subscribed to my newsletter, you may know that my previous post explained the basics of what Nano Banana Pro can do and shared a number of mind-blowing use cases.

It went viral (and even ranked on Google) because people are tired of hearing “it can make a picture of a cat”.

Later, I wrote a post explaining how Nano Banana can specifically help if you are a designer, a teacher, or a founder, and I shared practical workflows for each.

Seeing the hype around Nano Banana Pro, I spent another 50+ hours going deeper and found 7 advanced, profession-specific use cases that actually justify the “Pro” in the name.

And that’s what I’m going to share with you today.

A small request: I’ve spent a lot of time into making this post genuinely useful and practical. If even one part made you pause and think, don’t just close the tab and move on. Share it with someone who is still looking for this kind of content. You have no idea how much time you could save them by passing it along.

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With that said, let’s get started.

1. Generate a Full “Inside-Out” Product Breakdown

Let me be honest, even today, most AI image generators hallucinate when generating complex visuals.

No doubt, I tried generating some complex mechanics with different AI image generators, and they placed gears where they don’t belong.

But Nano Banana Pro’s reasoning engine is different, it understands complex concepts and can generate them visually with accuracy.

So instead of hiring a 3D illustrator for a preliminary manual, you can generate an exploded view to visualize the assembly.

Here’s the prompt I tried:

Create a technical, isometric exploded view of a vintage mechanical camera in dark mode. Separate the lens assembly, shutter mechanism, and body casing. Label the three major components with floating text lines. Style: Clean vector line art, white background, blueprint blue accents. High mechanical accuracy.

And here’s what it generated:

Here’s another example:

Generate a photorealistic 3D exploded view of a high-tech professional camera drone. The components (propellers, camera sensor glass, lithium battery block, and internal logic board) should be hovering vertically in mid-air, separated to show the internal engineering stack.

Materials should look premium: matte black plastic, brushed aluminum, and copper wiring accents. Use dramatic studio lighting with cool blue rim lights against a dark grey background.

Add floating text labels pointing to specific parts: Label the lens ‘OPTIC SENSOR’, the battery ‘Li-ION CORE’, and the motor ‘MAGLEV DRIVE’. Ensure the text is sharp and futuristic.

And based on that, here’s the output:

This can be useful for students to understand complex visuals, for teachers to explain concepts more easily, and for other similar purposes.


2. Turn a Rough Floor Plan Into a Trade Booth Layout

In my last post, I showed you how to generate a cozy minimalist design from a room plan, but let’s get specific for professionals.

If you are planning a pop-up store, a trade show booth, or a coffee shop layout, you can upload a rough sketch of the floor plan and ask it to generate the layout you want.

Let’s take an example.

Suppose you have a 10x10 booth at a conference and you need to see how it looks with your branding colors, a counter, and a TV screen.

Here’s the prompt I tried:

Visualize a trade show booth design for a tech company. The space is small (10x10 feet). Include a back wall with a large screen displaying a ‘Cloud Graph’. Use a minimalist white and orange color palette. Place a high table in the front right. Realistic lighting.

And here’s the output:

You see, by providing a more detailed prompt like this, you get a clear output and a complete idea of whether to move forward with the design.

And thanks to this, you can visualize anything you need, whether it’s a pop-up store, a trade show booth, a coffee shop layout, or something entirely different.

This can be useful for:

  1. Event Planners: To visualize venue layouts.

  2. Retail Owners: To plan seasonal window displays.

  3. Real Estate Agents: To virtually stage empty commercial offices for listings.


3. Create a Hyper-Realistic Product Photography

We all know that studio photography is expensive because controlling liquids, smoke, and gravity is hard.

And companies don’t really have alternatives, so they end up paying a hefty fee for product photography.

That’s where Nano Banana Pro can save you money and generate exactly what you need.

And yes, you can ask for a liquid splash that looks frozen in time, and the light refraction through the liquid will be physically accurate. This is the “money shot” for marketers.

Here’s the prompt I tested:

Commercial product photography of a luxury perfume bottle made of amber glass, placed on a dark reflective surface. The bottle is surrounded by splashing water and swirls of golden smoke. The lighting is backlit to make the liquid inside the bottle glow. The text on the bottle label reads “Eternity”. Macro lens details, water droplets on the glass, 8k resolution, unreal engine 5 render style.

And here’s the output:

This can be useful for:

  1. E-commerce Owners: creating seasonal variance for products (e.g., your product in snow for Xmas, or on sand for Summer) without a reshoot.

  2. Social Media Managers: creating high-end aesthetic posts for brands with zero budget.


4. Generate Isometric Game Environments & Assets

You know, I started my career as a web developer, spent a good amount of time playing some of the best games in my early days, and even have solid experience working in the gaming industry, like writing code, designing consistent game assets, and so on.

I know how difficult it is, and how much time game developers spend building all of it.

Even many AI tools struggle to keep the consistency right.

But after using Nano Banana Pro, I found that it creates perfect isometric grids and doesn’t skew the angles. This means you can generate assets that actually fit together on a map.

Here’s the prompt I tried:

Create a stylized low-poly isometric view of a fantasy “Potion Shop” on a floating island. The building should have a purple thatched roof, a glowing sign that reads “Potions”, and barrels of colorful liquid outside. The ground is grass with small stone paths. The background is a clean solid color. The lighting should be warm and cozy, resembling a high-quality mobile game asset. 3D render style, Blender Cycles.

Here’s another prompt to generate the complete game visual:

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