Korean Dakku Baby Photo — ChatGPT Baby-Studio Scrapbook Style Prompt

A ChatGPT prompt that turns your child's photo into a Korean baby-studio scrapbook with natural light and "dakku" decoration. Bunny onesies, banana milk, and Korean handwritten stickers — ready for Instagram grids and baby book covers.
Korean Dakku Baby Photo — ChatGPT Baby-Studio Scrapbook Style Prompt

Best with

GPT

Prompt

Keep the facial features of the attached baby and recreate it as a natural-light lifestyle baby photo in the style of a Korean baby studio, brightly smiling baby girl, wearing a cream-colored bunny onesie and a fluffy bunny-ear headband, spring picnic mood on lush bright-green grass, fluffy pastel yellow and light-green color palette, scrapbook layout with polaroid photo frames placed naturally, hand-drawn stickers and doodles in the Korean "dakku" (diary decoration) style, bunny plush, banana milk, yellow macarons, ribbons, and flower props, heart doodles and sparkle drawings, Korean handwritten text stickers like "우리 아기" (our baby) and "오늘도 사랑스러워" (lovely as always), the look of a Korean parenting-influencer photo that moms want to save, soft natural light, cozy warm atmosphere, adorable expression, emotional scrapbook layout, ultra-high resolution, delicate detail, soft shadows

Who this is for

Perfect for parents who love the Korean influencer / "dakku" (diary decoration) / baby-studio aesthetic. Great for unifying Instagram grid tones, making 100-day or first-birthday party board covers, or assembling a baby-book main page in a single shot. It's not just a face composite — the bunny onesie, banana milk, and handwritten Korean stickers all auto-arrange into a full Korean-style scrapbook that "moms want to save."

What you need

A front-facing or three-quarter portrait of your child (face clearly visible), a paid ChatGPT plan (GPT-4o or higher image model recommended), and your preferred outfit/prop tone. The "baby girl / cream bunny onesie" line can be swapped to match your child's gender and taste without breaking the overall tone — e.g., "smiling baby boy, beige bear onesie."

How to use

  1. Open a new ChatGPT conversation and attach your child's front-facing photo.
  2. Copy the full prompt below and paste it together with the photo.
  3. Swap "baby girl / cream bunny onesie" for your child's gender / season / preference (e.g., "baby boy / bear onesie / autumn-leaf background").
  4. Review the output. If the stickers feel too busy, follow up with "Reduce the dakku stickers by half." If the tone feels dark, ask for "Brighter overall tone, emphasize the pastel yellow."
  5. Once happy, use the image for Instagram grids, first-birthday boards, baby book covers, or album main pages.

Tips for better results

  • Korean handwritten stickers ("우리 아기 / 오늘도 사랑스러워") often render garbled. Stick to short common words (2–5 characters) for better results, and if the text breaks, take an empty-sticker version and add Korean text later in Canva or PowerPoint.
  • To swap seasons, change "spring picnic" to "autumn leaves / winter snow / summer beach" — same tone, full seasonal series ready for a 4-season baby book.
  • For Instagram grids, add "Crop to 1:1 square, center the child more" — the feed tone stays clean.
  • If the props (bunny plush / banana milk / macarons) feel cluttered, "Reduce props by half, focus on the child" gives a cleaner portrait-centric shot.

Variation ideas

  • 100-day / first-birthday board cover: add "100-day" or "first birthday" stickers + center the child.
  • Instagram grid 1:1 square: change ratio + halve the props.
  • Four-season baby book pages: only swap "spring picnic" → "autumn leaves / winter snow / summer beach."
  • Digital first-birthday mobile invitation background: shrink the child and emphasize polaroids and stickers.

Frequently asked questions

Q. How is this different from a Japanese "kawaii" prompt?
A. Similar structure, different tone. Japanese kawaii leans toward anime / character-goods feel, while this prompt leans into Korean dakku / baby-studio / natural-light lifestyle — more realistic and Instagram-friendly. The bunny onesie, banana milk, and "우리 아기" Korean stickers are Korea-specific elements that resonate with Korean parents.
Q. My child is a boy — can I still use this?
A. Yes — swap "baby girl" for "baby boy" and "cream bunny onesie" for something like "beige bear onesie," and the tone stays consistent. Change the handwritten text to "우리 아들" (our son) for a natural fit.
Q. Korean sticker text comes out garbled.
A. GPT image models render Korean less reliably than English. Short words (2–5 characters) work better, and the follow-up "Render text crisply" helps. If it still fails, take the result with empty stickers and add Korean text in Canva / PowerPoint.
Q. Too many props — it looks cluttered.
A. A single line — "Reduce the bunny plush, banana milk, and macaron props by half and focus on the child" — cleans it up. For a more minimal cut: "Remove all props, keep only the child and natural light."
Q. Will it hold up in print and frames?
A. GPT images come out around 1024×1536 / 1122×1402, which is fine for 4×6 / 5×7 inch frames and standard baby books. For A4 or larger, run it through an upscaler (Topaz, Magnific, Real-ESRGAN) first.

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