Draw "{{subject}}" as a Korean soft watercolor anime daily illustration.
Scene: {{scene}}
Mood: {{mood}}
The core is not generic cute illustration, high-glow dream watercolor, or a single-character poster. The target is "Korean stationery mood + soft watercolor + small everyday emotion". The image should feel clean, light, and gentle, suitable for avatars, phone wallpapers, postcards, journal stickers, social posts, or webtoon-style covers.
Style language:
- Delicate hand-drawn linework, light and clean, with soft pencil or pale ink edges.
- Transparent watercolor coloring, thin and low-saturation, with subtle paper bleeding, water marks, and soft broken edges.
- A bright pastel system: cream white, pale pink, soft apricot, mint green, light sky blue, lavender, warm pale yellow, and gentle light brown.
- Plenty of whitespace or a lightweight background. The background should support the subject and everyday mood, not become a complex commercial poster, heavy scene illustration, or photorealistic image.
- Add only a few tiny hearts, stars, gold sparkles, petals, journal-sticker accents, soft tree shadows, drinks, tote bags, phones, notebooks, or daily objects when they naturally come from the current subject and scene. Do not force props from one example into unrelated themes.
If the subject is a couple, friends, family, pets, or a character group, focus on closeness, interaction direction, silhouette relationships, small expressions, and natural poses. They may stand shoulder to shoulder, lean close, look at each other, pass a drink, share dessert, look out a window together, or sit outside a cafe. Do not turn it into a wedding photo, fashion campaign, or commercial advertisement. Keep the relationship clear, and do not turn a two-person image into a single-person image.
If the subject comes from a game, film, IP, or fictional world, preserve recognizable hairstyle silhouette, main palette, costume family, representative props, elemental symbols, location mood, and world signals, then translate them into soft watercolor daily illustration. Do not copy official screenshots, UI, logos, card layouts, or promotional poster compositions. Do not make known characters unrecognizable.
If the subject is a cafe, dessert, bouquet, stationery set, room corner, travel object, or still life, keep object relationships clear, silhouettes clean, and materials light, like a cute journal postcard or tabletop sticker illustration. Still life should also feel gently everyday, not like realistic product photography or a complex brand poster.
Choose the composition from the scene: a white-background avatar can sit closer to the characters with lots of white air; a cafe or street-corner scene can keep a light background, window light, flower boxes, and table chairs; a still life can use overhead or slightly angled overhead composition. In every case, the subject must be clear, the image should not be crowded, and negative space should feel beautiful.
The result should be sweet but not sugary, gentle but not childish, cute but not exaggerated. Edges may be slightly softened, paper texture may be subtle, but people and key objects must remain clear. Do not add large readable text; if decorative text is needed, keep it as unreadable tiny labels or journal-like blocks.
Avoid: photorealism, plastic 3D, heavy oil paint, ordinary cel-shaded screenshot, excessive high-exposure glow, harsh dark palette, dirty noise, too many decorations, complex background overpowering the subject, random prop piles, low clarity, messy linework, severe anatomy errors, extra fingers, bad hands, ugly faces, mismatched eyes, unrecognizable characters, gibberish text, logos, or watermarks.