Anime Illustration Generator
Want a illustration that genuinely reads as anime? Anime uses crisp ink outlines, flat cel shading, and expressive faces with big emotive eyes, often shot from a dramatic angle. renza applies that look from the first pixel, so you get crisp black ink outlines and flat cel-shaded color, not a plain illustration with a filter dropped on top.
A strong illustration tells a small story at a glance, with clear figures, intentional composition, and a mood that matches the text beside it. Vibrant, saturated colors with high-contrast shadows. The look traces back to modern Japanese animation, from Studio Trigger to Makoto Shinkai, and renza bakes it into a prompt tuned for anime illustrations before sending it to a high-fidelity image model. You get a result in a few seconds that you can refine or download, and every image is yours to keep. Match the mood to your surrounding copy, and keep a consistent style across a set so your blog or app feels cohesive.
- 3 free credits to start
- No credit card
- Commercial use, you own it
- No watermark
- Results in seconds
What defines the anime style
Anime uses crisp ink outlines, flat cel shading, and expressive faces with big emotive eyes, often shot from a dramatic angle.
Vibrant, saturated colors with high-contrast shadows. The look traces back to modern Japanese animation, from Studio Trigger to Makoto Shinkai, and on a illustration it gives you a result that feels deliberate rather than generic.
Pro tip · Describe the emotion and the camera angle, because anime leans hard on both to carry a scene.
- Crisp black ink outlines
- Flat cel-shaded color
- Expressive large eyes
- Dramatic camera angles
Anime illustration examples
Generated with the same model and style. Click any to open the generator with that prompt loaded.
How to generate a anime illustration
- 1 Write your prompt
Describe what you want. Be specific. Example: "a person working remotely from a sunny cafe". The more concrete the description, the better the result.
- 2 Confirm the anime style
The style is already applied. You don't need to mention "anime" in your prompt unless you want to emphasize a specific aspect of it.
- 3 Generate
Click Generate. You'll get a illustration back in a few seconds. Each click costs 1 credit on the default model.
- 4 Iterate
Not quite right? Tweak the prompt and run it again. Even small changes (one new adjective, one different noun) can shift the output significantly.
Tips for better prompts
- · Describe the subject first, then the context. "A blue mug on oak wood" works better than "blue mug".
- · Describe the emotion and the camera angle, because anime leans hard on both to carry a scene.
- · The anime style is already mixed into your prompt. You don't need to repeat "anime" in your text.
- · Think in nouns. For illustration, naming a specific material, mood, or setting moves the result more than piling on adjectives.
- · Stuck? Open one of the example prompts from the gallery and tweak a single detail.
Frequently asked questions
What makes a good Anime illustration?
A strong illustration tells a small story at a glance, with clear figures, intentional composition, and a mood that matches the text beside it. In the anime style specifically, that means leaning into crisp black ink outlines, flat cel-shaded color, and expressive large eyes rather than fighting them. renza already tunes the prompt in that direction, so your job is mostly to describe a strong subject and let the style do the rest.
Which model works best for a anime illustration?
For anime work, Flux Dev has strong anime training and keeps line work clean. You can switch models from the dropdown before you generate: Flux Dev is the fast all-rounder, Hyper Realistic is built for photoreal detail, Ideogram handles text inside the image, and Nano Banana 2 is the premium pick for the most demanding results. If you are just exploring, start on Flux Dev and only switch up if the anime look needs it.
Can I use my anime illustration commercially?
Yes. Every image you generate on renza is yours, including for commercial use such as client work, merchandise, print-on-demand, and resale. We don't watermark or claim ownership. The only limits: don't generate real, identifiable people without permission, and respect trademarks. Beyond that, the illustration is yours.
How long does each illustration take to generate?
Around 6 to 12 seconds on the default model (Flux Dev). Heavier models like Nano Banana 2 take 10 to 25 seconds. There's no queue, so you see the image as soon as it's rendered and can iterate quickly, which matters because most illustrations land after a few tries rather than the first one.
What if anime isn't the right style for my illustration?
You have 23 other styles to try, each tuned for a different look. Jump to the Illustration generator hub to browse them all, or check the "More generators in Anime style" section below if you like anime but want a different category. You can also nudge the result with your own modifiers, like "anime but warmer" or "anime with more contrast".
Any tips before I generate my illustration?
Match the mood to your surrounding copy, and keep a consistent style across a set so your blog or app feels cohesive. And one anime-specific note: describe the emotion and the camera angle, because anime leans hard on both to carry a scene.