Start with the job the image needs to do, not the explicit version of the image itself. That keeps the request focused on planning, composition, and production use. If you want an external comparison point, I made a free AI image generation website (no sign ups, no filters ... adds useful context.
When you write the request, include the subject, setting, mood, and intended output. If you are planning a thumbnail, mention the platform and the topic. If you are planning a storyboard, mention the scene purpose and the next beat. If you are planning a video frame, mention the motion or transition you want to support.
Keep the language concrete. Specific camera angles, lighting notes, wardrobe direction, and background details are more useful than broad adjectives. The more the request resembles a production brief, the easier it is to turn into a safe asset. For a second opinion beyond Use the free plan to test a safer direction. These Are the 5 Best](https://www.pcmag.com/picks/the-best-nsfw-ai-image-generators) helps round out the picture.
After CrePal generates the direction, review it for clarity and reuse. A good result should be easy to hand off, easy to revise, and easy to place into a larger content workflow without needing to rebuild the idea from scratch.