Create a vertical 2:3 "pen-written miniature world" image.
Copy text: {{copy_text}}
World direction: {{world_direction}}
Writing surface: {{writing_surface}}
Visual mood: {{visual_mood}}
The core of this image is not a normal miniature landscape, a simple pop-up book, or a paper-craft model. It is a concrete visual metaphor: a pen tip is actively writing "{{copy_text}}" on paper, and the imagery inside that line is being depicted by words, ink, strokes, and paper texture until it becomes a real visible miniature world on the page.
The image must show three layers at once:
1. Real writing layer: a brush, fountain pen, dip pen, or writing tool has its tip touching the paper. The action must feel like active writing, not a pen lying nearby.
2. Text layer: the paper contains short text, poem words, title words, or manuscript fragments derived from "{{copy_text}}". Preserve key words from the copy where possible. Keep the writing sparse and clear rather than producing long gibberish.
3. Miniature world layer: the imagery in the copy grows from handwriting, ink, strokes, punctuation, paper fibers, or still-wet ink into a small but complete world.
Understand the concrete imagery in "{{copy_text}}" and "{{world_direction}}", then translate it into tiny terrain, architecture, natural elements, people, props, or light on the paper. A classical poem may grow into mountains, rivers, a lone boat, snow, moonlight, pavilions, pine trees, or distant peaks. A prose poem may grow into wind, letters, starlight, streets, rooms, coastlines, lighthouses, or clock towers. Brand copy may grow into roads, cities, product metaphors, journeys, homecoming lights, or abstract ideas made physically visible. Use only imagery that serves the current copy; do not force every example motif into the scene.
The miniature world must still be on paper. Keep the paper surface, paper edge, writing medium, desk scale, and real-world lighting visible so the viewer understands that the world is being drawn onto the page by the pen tip. Ink rivers may flow along lines of text, strokes may rise into ridges, paper fibers may become roads, punctuation may become stars, and handwritten lines may become bridges, branches, coastlines, or city streets.
Use a macro or close three-quarter composition. The foreground should include the pen tip touching the paper and wet ink. The midground should include readable copy fragments. The background or center of the paper should contain the miniature world extending from the text. Maintain a clear scale contrast: pen tip, ink drops, and paper fibers are large; tiny boats, houses, trees, people, or lights inside the world are small. This scale relationship is essential to the image.
Use "{{writing_surface}}" to decide the paper and tool. Possible surfaces include rice paper, parchment, cotton postcard paper, journal paper, letter paper, poetry manuscript, old notebook, gridded draft paper, or a loose desk sheet. Possible tools include a brush, vintage fountain pen, dip pen, pencil, ink pen, or gold nib. Make the material believable with fibers, pressure marks, ink absorption, blooming, paper edges, slight wrinkles, and desk shadows.
Use "{{visual_mood}}" to decide light and finish. The result should feel like high-quality macro photography, handmade model photography, poetic concept poster, and fantasy illustration combined: the real paper and writing tool are believable, while the miniature world has depth, detail, and light. Do not let it become pure 3D rendering, a generic landscape painting, a normal journal page, or plain calligraphy.
If the copy comes from a game, film, book, brand, or fictional world, preserve recognizable world signals, location mood, elemental symbols, character silhouettes, signature props, and key colors, then let them grow naturally from the paper text and ink. Do not copy official UI, logos, screenshots, cards, promotional poster compositions, or existing character poses. Also do not erase the world identity into generic decoration.
Text control is crucial. The paper may show 2 to 12 key words from "{{copy_text}}" or one short phrase. Prioritize a readable title or poem fragment. If the model cannot reliably write the whole copy, keep only the most image-rich keywords and let the rest behave like believable manuscript texture. Avoid full-page fake text, gibberish, unrelated English, watermarks, QR codes, real brand marks, and platform UI.
The final image should communicate at a glance: this is not just showing a world, it is writing a sentence, and the sentence is literally being drawn into a world. Prioritize pen tip touching paper, text derived from the copy, world growing from handwriting and ink, clear paper scale, and imagery that matches the copy.
Avoid normal miniature model photography, ordinary pop-up books, complete paper diorama cards, floating fantasy worlds, pure landscape illustration, plain calligraphy, a pen not touching the paper, no visible text, text unrelated to the world, the world detached from the page, long gibberish, inaccurate copying of large text blocks, copied official IP assets, logos, watermarks, hands dominating the image, overly plastic 3D, and crowded composition.