Grandparents' Day Baby Emoji Pack — ChatGPT Filial-Piety Carnation 16-Sticker Prompt

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Prompt
[Basic Setup] 4x4 grid layout (16 emoji total) Each cell shows a different situation and emotion Character appearance, face, and overall mood stay consistent across all scenes Cute and warm aesthetic with pastel-tone carnations and heart illustrations on a clean white background, styled like stickers Each scene works as a standalone emoji Place text below the face [Theme] Subject: {love, Mother's/Father's Day, "Grandma and Grandpa, I love you"} (e.g., expressions of love, gratitude, aegyo, greetings, encouragement, filial-piety mood) [Scene Generation Rules] Auto-compose 16 scenes by combining theme-appropriate actions and emotions Expressions should be exaggerated yet still cute and natural; include plenty of character interactions All 16 scenes wear the same carnation headband (cute, exaggerated style) Scene examples: * Smiling while holding a bouquet * Two-hand heart * Holding a hand-written letter * Bowing politely * Throwing hearts * Looking shy * Smiling next to a gift box * Running with flowers * Cheek-heart pose * Waving * Kissy face * Saying thank you * "꼬옥~" hugging pose * Happy reaction * Love-expression gesture * Cheering expression [Text] Auto-generate and place 5–10 short Korean phrases that match the theme (greetings, emotions, reactions) Example phrases: "사랑해요" (I love you) "건강하세요" (Stay healthy) "꽃 드릴게요" (Here are some flowers) "감사해요" (Thank you) "꼬옥~" (squeeze) "행복하세요" (Be happy) "헤헤" (hehe) "보고싶었어요" (I missed you) "쪽!" (kiss) "오래오래 같이 있어요" (Let's stay together for a long time)
Who this is for
Great for parents who want to send a Mother's/Father's Day greeting to their own parents or in-laws but find handwritten letters or video calls a little awkward. With 16 grandkid emoji on one image and Korean filial-piety phrases like "I love you," "Stay healthy," and "Let's stay together for a long time" already baked in, you can drop it straight into a family chat without copywriting it yourself.
What you need
A front-facing portrait of your child (face clearly visible), a paid ChatGPT plan (GPT-4o or higher image model recommended), and a clear sense of who you're sending it to (paternal grandma, maternal grandpa, etc.). A neutral, front-facing photo composites best across 16 expression variations, and a simple background gives a cleaner result.
How to use
- Open a new ChatGPT conversation and attach your child's front-facing photo.
- Copy the full prompt below and paste it together with the photo.
- Leave the [Theme] line as-is for the default grandparents' filial-piety set, or narrow it to a single grandparent (e.g., "Grandma, I love you") if you want a more targeted version.
- Review the 4×4 grid. If the headband disappears in a cell or an expression looks off, ask for a partial regen like "Redraw the first cell in the second row as a finger-heart pose."
- Once you're happy, download the image and send it to your family chat as a single image, or crop each cell into individual stickers to send one at a time.
Tips for better results
- If text overlaps the face, the expression gets covered and the filial-piety feel weakens. Keep the "Place text below the face" line in the prompt.
- 5–10 Korean phrases is the sweet spot. Too many phrases hurt readability; too few feel monotone.
- When the carnation headband drops out of some cells, the grandparents-day theme feels scattered. Follow up with "Keep the same carnation headband across all 16 cells" to lock it in.
- The same format adapts to Korean holidays (Chuseok, Lunar New Year). Swap the carnation for a hanbok ornament or party hat and replace the phrases with seasonal greetings to turn this into a holiday card.
Variation ideas
- Single-grandparent card: narrow the theme to one person (e.g., "love, Mother's Day, I love you Grandma") for a more targeted set.
- Holiday greetings: swap the carnation for a hanbok ornament or lucky pouch, replace the phrases with "Happy New Year" or "Happy Chuseok."
- First-birthday or 100-day greetings: change the theme to "celebration, 100-day, greeting Grandma and Grandpa" and swap the carnation for a party hat or balloons.
- Everyday family chat: drop the seasonal keywords for "I miss you, daily hello" — works as a year-round family chat sticker pack.
Frequently asked questions
- Q. Why a separate set for grandparents instead of using the parents' Mother's Day version?
- A. "I love you, Mom" and "I love you, Grandma" carry slightly different tones. The grandparents version uses filial-piety phrases like "Stay healthy" and "Let's stay together for a long time" — natural for grandparents, less so for parents. The 4×4 format stays the same; only the theme keywords switch.
- Q. The Korean text comes out garbled or in English. What do I do?
- A. GPT image models render English more reliably than Korean. Stick to short phrases (2–5 characters), emphasize "Render text crisply," and re-roll if needed. As a fallback, generate empty speech bubbles and add Korean captions later in PowerPoint, Canva, or a similar tool.
- Q. Just one cell looks off. Can I regenerate only that cell?
- A. Yes — within the same chat, specify the position like "Change the third cell in the second row to smiling-while-holding-a-bouquet." The other 15 cells stay intact so the overall set tone is preserved.
- Q. I want to send separate sets to paternal grandma and maternal grandma.
- A. Run the prompt twice with different theme keywords ("paternal grandma" vs. "maternal grandma"). The two sets come out with slightly different expressions and phrases, so each side gets a card that feels personal.
- Q. Can I register these as KakaoTalk emoji?
- A. KakaoTalk Emoticon Studio has its own production specs, so you can't register this output directly. But you can send it as an image or animated sticker in family chats, Instagram stories, or LINE — effectively a family-only sticker pack.
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