peanut-illustrations

star 4

Turn a short prompt into one clean, hand-drawn concept illustration starring a deadpan peanut. Use when the user gives an idea, judgment, process, feeling, or metaphor as a short prompt and wants a single "peanut" illustration, concept sketch, explainer image, article figure, or visual for it. Default style is a deadpan in-shell peanut, black hand-drawn line art on white, one warm-orange accent, lots of whitespace, one idea per image, and the exact bottom-right watermark "© peanut-illustrations-by-aish" added after generation — composed first, then generated.

aishwaryaashok14 By aishwaryaashok14 schedule Updated 6/7/2026

name: peanut-illustrations description: Turn a short prompt into one clean, hand-drawn concept illustration starring a deadpan peanut. Use when the user gives an idea, judgment, process, feeling, or metaphor as a short prompt and wants a single "peanut" illustration, concept sketch, explainer image, article figure, or visual for it. Default style is a deadpan in-shell peanut, black hand-drawn line art on white, one warm-orange accent, lots of whitespace, one idea per image, and the exact bottom-right watermark "© peanut-illustrations-by-aish" added after generation — composed first, then generated.

Peanut Illustrations

Core idea

Turn a short prompt into one 16:9 hand-drawn concept illustration. The goal is not commercial art, a PPT infographic, or a cute cartoon — it is to take a single idea (a judgment, process, contrast, state, or metaphor) and draw it as a clean, deadpan, slightly absurd sketch that reads in about one second.

The recurring character is the peanut: a whole in-shell peanut with dot eyes, two thin legs, and a blank, serious expression — completely unbothered while gravely doing a ridiculous job. The peanut must perform the core action of the image, not stand beside it as decoration.

Input is a short prompt, not an article. The user already knows the idea; this skill's job is to invent a fitting visual metaphor, put the peanut to work inside it, and draw it well.

The contract: compose first, then draw

For each prompt, think briefly out loud, then generate one image. Before calling the image model, state:

  • Metaphor — the fresh low-tech metaphor you invented for this prompt.
  • Peanut's action — what the peanut is physically doing to drive the idea.
  • Labels — the short English handwritten labels that will appear (a few; at most 5-8).
  • Composition — where the peanut sits, the main object, and how the eye moves.
  • Watermark — reserve a quiet lower-right margin for the exact watermark © peanut-illustrations-by-aish; do not ask the image model to render this text.

Then generate one image. One prompt → one composed image. Do not fan out into variations unless the user asks. If the user gives several prompts, make one image each.

Read these references as needed

Pull in only what the task needs; do not load everything at once:

  • references/style-dna.md — the visual DNA: line, color (single warm-orange accent), whitespace, hard nos.
  • references/peanut-character.md — the peanut's form, personality, action vocabulary, and don'ts.
  • references/composition-patterns.md — structure types and how to invent a fresh metaphor every time.
  • references/prompt-template.md — the fill-in-the-blanks single-image generation prompt.
  • references/qa-checklist.md — post-generation checks and iteration moves.

Workflow

1. Read the prompt

Take the user's short prompt and decide what kind of idea it is: a judgment, an input→output process, a before/after contrast, a character/user state, or a concept metaphor. That choice picks the structure type. Do not over-interpret a one-liner into a whole article — illustrate the single idea in front of you.

2. Compose (think briefly)

State the metaphor, the peanut's action, the labels, and the composition (see "The contract" above). Keep it to a few lines — enough for the user to catch a wrong take in one second, not an essay.

3. Generate one image

If the user clearly asks to generate, do not stop for confirmation — use the built-in image tool and produce one image with the prompt template. Each prompt must include:

  • 16:9 horizontal concept illustration
  • pure white background
  • black hand-drawn line art
  • exactly one warm-orange accent color (no other colors)
  • lots of whitespace
  • the peanut as the subject performing the core action
  • a few short handwritten English labels
  • a quiet lower-right margin for the watermark
  • no PPT look, no commercial illustration, no childish cuteness, no complex architecture diagram, no top-left type-title

Invent a fresh metaphor for every prompt. Do not reuse a metaphor from a previous image unless the user explicitly asks to reuse or remix one.

4. Check and iterate

Run references/qa-checklist.md. Regenerate or do a local edit if:

  • the peanut is only decorative
  • the canvas is too full
  • it looks like a flowchart or slide
  • there is too much text or garbled text
  • a type-title appears in the top-left corner
  • the style drifts cute, childish, or stiff
  • a second accent color crept in, or the background is not clean white

5. Add the watermark

After choosing the final generated image, add the exact watermark locally before reporting it:

© peanut-illustrations-by-aish

Use scripts/add_watermark.py so the text is exact and does not depend on the image model. Keep the watermark small, black, low-prominence, and tucked into the bottom-right quiet margin. It is not a concept label and does not count toward the label limit. Do not use the warm-orange accent for the watermark.

6. Save and report

If working inside a workspace, copy the final image to:

assets/<prompt-slug>-illustrations/

Name in order:

01-topic-name.png
02-topic-name.png

Keep the original generated file and the unwatermarked generated source. Do not overwrite existing assets unless the user asks to replace them.

Output register

Keep the pre-generation "compose" note short and concrete. After generating, report:

  • how many images were made
  • what each one is
  • the save path

Let the image do the talking; do not lecture about style theory.

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/aishwaryaashok14/peanut-illustrations --skill peanut-illustrations
Repository Details
star Stars 4
call_split Forks 0
navigation Branch main
article Path SKILL.md
More from Creator
aishwaryaashok14
aishwaryaashok14 Explore all skills →