EPISODE · Aug 19, 2024 · 9 MIN
Generating logo images with Grok (TLP 2024w33)
from Lead Prompt Podcast · host John Collins
This week I used Grok to render a new logo for my web search engine greppr, and got great results! Notes: I missed last week due to a holiday. This week, I decided it was time to give greppr.org a fresh look. To recap, greppr is my web search engine that I have been building since last year. It is a generic search engine with about 6 million web pages indexed so far. The logo I was using was pretty ugly, and was only meant as temporary place-holder. Recently the AI engine in X, named Grok, was updated to include the ability to generate images from a text prompt. I thought it would be interesting to use it to generate a new logo for my greppr service, as frankly I am no good at graphic design. I already have a premium account on X, so I already had access to Grok. If you are watching the video version of this episode on X or YouTube, you will see some of the results from Grok which I think you will agree look great! The prompts I used to generate these images were: "Draw a greppr logo in white and blue with a white background and cyberpunk style" "Draw the previous image again, but time using the color #264e86 instead of blue" - here I found Grok did not copy forward the previous image as requested, but generated a whole new one. It also failed to use the hexadecimal colours I provided. "Draw the previous image again, but this time use #e9ecef as the background color" - again it gave a new image. "Draw logo for web search engine "greppr" in cyberpunk style with white background" - here it consistently generated images with white backgrounds, and gave me the results I was hoping for. Perhaps it is better at parsing named colours? In addition to logo generation, I can also see a compelling use case for content creators like me: using tools like Grok to generate images to use in podcast videos. Right now I use free stock photography websites, but I think I will switch to Grok for still images from now on, and only use stock for video. If I was a graphic designer, I would be extremely worried. What I am working on this week: I revamped the logo and style sheets of greppr.org - see the video for some before and after screen-shots. Media I am enjoying this week: Maelstrom by Peter Watts, which is part 2 of his Rifter series. Notes and subscription links are here: https://techleader.pro/a/656-Generating-logo-images-with-Grok-(TLP-2024w33)
What this episode covers
This week I used Grok to render a new logo for my web search engine greppr, and got great results! Notes: I missed last week due to a holiday. This week, I decided it was time to give greppr.org a fresh look. To recap, greppr is my web search engine that I have been building since last year. It is a generic search engine with about 6 million web pages indexed so far. The logo I was using was pretty ugly, and was only meant as temporary place-holder. Recently the AI engine in X, named Grok, was updated to include the ability to generate images from a text prompt. I thought it would be interesting to use it to generate a new logo for my greppr service, as frankly I am no good at graphic design. I already have a premium account on X, so I already had access to Grok. If you are watching the video version of this episode on X or YouTube, you will see some of the results from Grok which I think you will agree look great! The prompts I used to generate these images were: "Draw a greppr logo in white and blue with a white background and cyberpunk style" "Draw the previous image again, but time using the color #264e86 instead of blue" - here I found Grok did not copy forward the previous image as requested, but generated a whole new one. It also failed to use the hexadecimal colours I provided. "Draw the previous image again, but this time use #e9ecef as the background color" - again it gave a new image. "Draw logo for web search engine "greppr" in cyberpunk style with white background" - here it consistently generated images with white backgrounds, and gave me the results I was hoping for. Perhaps it is better at parsing named colours? In addition to logo generation, I can also see a compelling use case for content creators like me: using tools like Grok to generate images to use in podcast videos. Right now I use free stock photography websites, but I think I will switch to Grok for still images from now on, and only use stock for video. If I was a graphic designer, I would be extremely worried. What I am working on this week: I revamped the logo and style sheets of greppr.org - see the video for some before and after screen-shots. Media I am enjoying this week: Maelstrom by Peter Watts, which is part 2 of his Rifter series. Notes and subscription links are here: https://techleader.pro/a/656-Generating-logo-images-with-Grok-(TLP-2024w33)
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Generating logo images with Grok (TLP 2024w33)
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