Phoenix 1.0 is a text-to-image model designed to produce high-resolution visuals, up to 5 megapixels, from a plain-text prompt. It removes the need for stock subscriptions or design software by generating finished images directly from what you describe. A marketer writing copy, a creator building a portfolio, or a freelancer pitching a client can all use it without any prior image-editing experience. The model runs in three modes: fast for quick previews when you want to test an idea, quality for balanced output, and ultra for maximum detail when the final result matters most. Over twenty style presets, including cinematic, HDR, portrait, illustration, and sketch, let you set the visual tone before the first generation. Aspect ratio and contrast controls mean you can shape the composition from the start, not in a separate editing step. In a typical workflow, you type a prompt, select a style and aspect ratio, and get a result in seconds. The prompt enhancement option rewrites vague inputs into richer descriptions automatically, which reduces the trial-and-error cycle. Running multiple images in one batch lets you compare variations side by side and pick the best output without starting over.
Phoenix 1.0 is a text-to-image model that turns written prompts into high-resolution visuals up to 5 megapixels. Built as the foundational model of Picasso IA, it's designed for creators who need a single tool that handles everything from quick concept sketches to publication-ready photography. You choose the generation mode, pick a style from over 20 presets, set your aspect ratio, and write your prompt. The result arrives in seconds, not minutes. It's a practical fit for product designers drafting mockups, marketers building visual assets, and artists testing ideas before committing to a longer production process.
Do I need programming skills or technical knowledge to use this? No, just open Phoenix 1.0 on Picasso IA, adjust the settings you want, and hit generate.
Is it free to try? Yes, you can run Phoenix 1.0 without any upfront payment. The platform offers a free tier with credits, and the pricing page has the current details on how those work.
How long does it take to get results? Fast mode delivers a result in a few seconds. Quality mode takes slightly longer and produces sharper outputs, while Ultra mode gives you the most detail at a moderate processing wait. Most generations finish in under 30 seconds.
What resolutions and aspect ratios are supported? Phoenix 1.0 outputs images up to 5 megapixels and supports 13 different aspect ratios, including 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, 3:2, 2:1, and 3:1. That range covers social media, print, web banners, and vertical mobile formats without any manual cropping.
Can I customize the style and look of the output? Yes. There are more than 20 style presets built in, from 3D render and ray-traced to pro color photography, fashion, and minimalist. If none of those fit, set style to none and write the aesthetic description directly into your prompt.
What happens if the first result isn't what I wanted? Run it again with a modified prompt or switch the generation mode. Changing even a few words often shifts the output noticeably. Ultra mode is worth trying when you need more precision in texture and fine detail.
Where can I use the images I generate? You own the outputs. Use them in client work, social media posts, marketing materials, or personal projects. Images are delivered without watermarks.
Everything this model can do for you
Produce images at up to 5MP resolution, giving you sharp detail suitable for print or large-format display.
Switch between fast, quality, and ultra to match your deadline or your quality target.
Choose from cinematic, portrait, HDR, sketch, illustration, and more to set the visual direction before you generate.
Pick from thirteen ratios including 16:9, 9:16, 1:1, and 3:1 to fit any platform or format.
Let the model automatically refine your input into a more detailed instruction for better results.
Set contrast to low, medium, or high to shape the mood of the image before generating.
Request multiple images in a single run to compare variations without repeating the process.