Prompt Notes

Notes Behind the Prompt Library

These notes explain the learning value behind the current Poorna Tech prompt collection. They are written to help viewers understand what each prompt is trying to achieve before opening the linked document.

Use these notes as a guide for adaptation. A prompt becomes more useful when you understand the intent behind it: the scene type, the subject, the action, the visual direction, and the details that can be changed.

Intense Escalator Action Scene

This prompt idea focuses on creating a fast, cinematic action moment in a tight public space. The useful learning point is how to combine location, motion, camera angle, and tension in one prompt. Viewers can adapt it by changing the setting from an escalator to a hallway, train station, market, or office entrance.

Childhood Profile

This concept is useful for profile-style transformations and memory- based visual prompts. It usually depends on softer details such as age, expression, lighting, background, and emotional tone. A viewer can modify the prompt for family portraits, childhood memories, or character backstories.

TVK Video and TVK Image

These resources show how the same theme can be explored in both motion and still-image formats. The important lesson is that video prompts need movement and pacing, while image prompts need stronger composition, pose, and visual detail. Comparing both formats helps creators write better prompts for the right output type.

Govindaa Prompt

This prompt is built around a specific cultural or character-driven style. When adapting prompts like this, viewers should pay attention to tone, clothing, facial expression, environment, and the feeling of the scene. Small details can change the result significantly.

Spotted at Airport

Airport-style prompts are useful for celebrity, travel, candid, or documentary-looking concepts. The setting naturally gives the prompt visual cues: luggage, terminal lighting, walking movement, crowd presence, and public-camera realism.

Metro Station and Classroom Action Scenes

These prompts are examples of controlled action scenes. The viewer can learn how a location shapes the story: a metro station feels public and urgent, while a classroom feels smaller and more personal. Changing the location changes the emotional impact of the prompt.

Childhood vs Present Prompt

This idea is useful for comparison-based outputs. The prompt needs a clear contrast between two time periods, while still keeping the same person or subject recognisable. Good adaptations can compare age, career, style, confidence, environment, or life stage.

Your Name in Landsat by NASA

This resource is different from the prompt documents because it links to an official public tool. It adds variety to the library and gives viewers a useful web experience they can try directly.

Claude Built This From One Prompt

This example is about how a single well-structured instruction can produce a larger result. It is useful for learning prompt clarity: define the goal, specify constraints, describe the output, and give enough context for the tool to complete the task.