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Evan-dong

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I Generated a Full Brand Mockup Set from a Logo in 10 Minutes — Here's the Workflow

I Generated a Full Brand Mockup Set from a Logo in 10 Minutes — Here's the Workflow

Every time I finish a logo, the same problem comes back: how do I show what this brand actually looks like in the real world? Clients don't react to a mark on a white background. They want to see signage, cards, packaging, booths, and product surfaces.

That part usually takes half a day of mockup sourcing and layout work. I wanted to see if Image 2 could compress that.

Who this is for: designers, brand consultants, or developers building brand-adjacent tools who want a faster mockup workflow.

The framework

I split the output into six categories before generating anything:

  1. Logo material and finish studies
  2. Single branded item mockups
  3. Combined brand material sets
  4. Spatial and environmental scenes
  5. Human or usage scenarios
  6. Social media visuals

The planning prompt

Once you have the categories, use this prompt to generate a plan:

I already have a logo. The industry is [industry]. The brand personality is [keywords]. Based on the uploaded logo, help me plan a complete logo mockup generation set. Include: 1) logo material variations, 2) single brand applications, 3) combined brand materials, 4) spatial scenes, 5) human or usage scenarios, and 6) social media visuals. For each category, provide the recommended visual direction, aspect ratio, and prompts that can be used directly in Image 2. Keep the logo recognizable, choose materials appropriate to the industry and brand personality, and make the outputs suitable for a brand proposal.

Test 1: Evolink (tech/API brand)

Brand inputs: professional, stable, developer-friendly, enterprise-ready, connected.

Image 2 generated logo finishes, interface materials, developer badges, documentation covers, and booth-style spatial visuals.

Evolink logo mockup direction

Evolink branded material mockup

Evolink high-resolution brand scene

Evolink product and brand environment

Evolink booth concept

Evolink brand application scene

Evolink card or badge application

After one round, Evolink stopped looking like just a geometric mark. It started to feel like a real company with booths, dashboards, documentation, and team assets.

Test 2: MoriJoy (nature park brand)

To see if this holds outside tech, I tried MoriJoy — a parent-child nature park. Logo: smiling treehouse + sapling. Palette: wood tones, cream, light green. Personality: soft, warm, healing, natural, playful, family-oriented.

The mockup directions shifted completely: entrance signage, membership cards, staff name tags, children's drinkware, sticker sets, tote bags, family activity spaces.

MoriJoy entrance and environment

MoriJoy branded item mockup

MoriJoy spatial brand scene

Same workflow, completely different visual language. The system adapts the brand world around the logo.

What I learned

  • The six-part framework prevents random outputs and keeps the set coherent.
  • Defining brand personality keywords before generating makes a big difference.
  • Not every output is perfect — you still need design judgment to pick the best directions.
  • This works best for early-stage proposals and direction-setting, not final production.
  • The workflow compresses what normally takes half a day into about 10 minutes.

Try it

If you're building brand proposals or need to show a logo in context quickly, this workflow is worth testing.

Upload your logo and generate a full brand mockup set with Image 2: https://evolink.ai/gpt-image-2

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