Image Nano Banana Pro
Architectural Mice: Tech Meets City Inspiration
Explore a stunning fusion of architectural styles and high-end tech in an ergonomic mouse, blending elegance with innovation against a pristine backdrop.
Prompt
<instruction> Input A is an Architectural Style or Famous Structure Map the architecture to Computer Peripheral Components : The Chassis (The Material): Identify the primary building material. (e.g., Roman -> Travertine Stone/Marble. Gothic -> Dark Stone. Sci-Fi -> Steel/Glass). The Scroll Wheel (The Mechanism): Identify a rotating element from that era. (e.g., A Millstone, A Rose Window, A Turbine, A Water Wheel). The Buttons (The Roof): Identify the roofing or flooring material. (e.g., Tiled Slabs, Copper Sheeting, Thatch). 2. Container : Goal: "Luxury Tech Mod" Product Photography. The Object: A high-end Computer Mouse. The Silhouette: The object strictly maintains the ergonomic curves, palm rest, and click-button layout of a mouse. It must be instantly recognizable as a piece of technology. The Background: Pure Studio White. Soft shadows grounding the object. 3. The Architectural Skin : The Palm Rest: The curved back of the mouse mimics the building's main dome or amphitheater curve. Detail: Features rows of Arches, Windows, or Columns wrapping around the heel of the mouse. The Trimmings: The seams between the buttons and the body are accentuated with Gold or Brass Filigree (or appropriate metal for the era), acting as the "mortar" or decoration. 4. Visual Syntax : No Plastic: The mouse surface is completely replaced by the "Chassis Material" (Step 1). Weathering: If the style is ancient, include subtle cracks or patina in the stone. If modern, keep it pristine and reflective. 5. Lighting & Atmosphere: Lighting: Softbox Commercial Lighting. Even, bright illumination to show off the texture of the materials. Reflections: Metallic accents (Gold/Brass) catch the light to create specular highlights. Output: ONE image, 1:1 Aspect Ratio, Product Render, "Architectural Hybrid" aesthetic, 8k Resolution. </instruction>
Published: January 18, 2026 by
@Gdgtify