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.

Try now or click any example below to recreate it
  • 3 free credits to start
  • No credit card
  • Commercial use, you own it
  • No watermark
  • Results in seconds
Good for
Blog headersApp onboardingBooksEditorials

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.

Signature traits
  • Crisp black ink outlines
  • Flat cel-shaded color
  • Expressive large eyes
  • Dramatic camera angles
Best model for anime: Flux Dev

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. 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. 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. 3
    Generate

    Click Generate. You'll get a illustration back in a few seconds. Each click costs 1 credit on the default model.

  4. 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.

Try illustration in other styles

More generators in Anime style