
Find Top FREE Prompt Libraries for Your AI Projects
Apr 29
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Are you using AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini but sometimes struggle with getting the right results? It often comes down to the prompt you use. A good prompt makes a big difference. Finding great prompts can take time, but thankfully, many free prompt libraries exist. This post shares some places where you can find prompts that can help you get more out of popular AI models for various tasks.
Google AI Studio Prompt Gallery
Google offers a prompt gallery that's helpful for people working with AI. While made for developers, it has prompts useful for others too. For example, there's a marketing writer prompt. You can upload a product image and give a target audience. The built-in Gemini 1.5 Flash model can then write an engaging marketing description right there. You don't always need to copy the prompt out, though you can if you prefer.
The gallery covers many different uses. Each section shows you the prompt. You can also set up system instructions or choose a specific model.
Hero.page
Hero.page is another source with many useful prompts. These often feel practical, especially for business owners and marketers. You can find prompts for content creation, design, and media.
When you find a prompt, you can often run it on their site. Many prompts have placeholders. You can type in your specific details to replace the placeholders easily. Then you can copy the changed prompt to use in ChatGPT or other tools. Hero.page also includes prompts for Midjourney and other image tools. These can help you create detailed images from text.
Snack Prompt
Snack Prompt is a site with lots of prompts, some free, some paid. You can filter to find the free ones easily. Many prompts have ratings, which is helpful. For instance, a "One Click Book Creator" prompt helps generate chapter ideas and text based on a book topic.
This prompt is designed to give you output in chunks. It might provide a title and chapter outline first, then ask when you are ready for the text for chapter one. This works well because AI models have limits on how much they can output at once. You can copy these prompts and use them with models like ChatGPT.
Finding the right prompt for image generation can be tricky. If you work with image AI like Midjourney and want to save time and get amazing results consistently, explore automation. The TitanXT Midjourney Automation Suite can help streamline your creative workflow.
OpenAI Platform Prompt Library (Historical Note)
OpenAI offered one of the first prompt libraries. It was mainly for developers building AI apps. These prompts were often simpler or more system-based. While basic compared to newer libraries, it's worth noting its place in AI prompt history. It gave examples like creating a single-page website layout from a prompt.
Anthropic Claude Prompt Library
Anthropic also has its own prompt library for Claude. Similar to OpenAI's, it includes system prompts and user prompts. System prompts are background instructions for a chatbot, while user prompts are what you type into the chat.
These prompts are often more detailed and comprehensive than the earlier OpenAI ones. They provide solid examples that can be adapted for building custom chatbots or just getting ideas for better prompts in conversations.
Image Prompt Libraries
For creative people or marketers who need images, libraries focused on image prompts are useful. These let you search for prompts for tools like Midjourney, Stable Diffusion, and others.
Many of these sites show you the output image along with the prompt. This helps you see if the prompt might work for you. You can often search for specific styles or subjects. This is great if you are trying to create an image similar to a stock photo but need something original, or just want to explore different visual ideas ready to use in image generators like Midjourney.
If your work involves generating many images with Midjourney, managing and organizing prompts can become a project in itself. Consider using the TitanXT Midjourney Automation Suite to simplify the process and improve your productivity.
Role Prompting Library (Github)
A different type of library focuses on "role prompting". This technique starts by telling the AI to act as a specific role, like "act as an English translator and improver" or "act as a travel guide."
This GitHub resource compile many examples of role prompts. They can be quite detailed. Using a role prompt often helps the AI give you a better, more focused answer, especially when you are newer to writing prompts.
Google Cloud Vertex AI Prompt Gallery
Google Cloud offers the Vertex AI prompt gallery. These prompts are often designed for developers but can be used by anyone with tools like ChatGPT or Claude. Examples include prompts for advertising campaigns or generating social media posts.
These prompts might look more complex, sometimes using hashtags or stars as separators to highlight key parts. A helpful feature here is the ability to add examples. You can show the AI what your input looks like and what your ideal output would be. Providing input and output examples helps the AI understand exactly what you want, leading to much better results.
Though designed for Google Cloud's platform (using Gemini models), the ideas and structures of these prompts can be copied and used with any other model.
Automating parts of your Midjourney workflow can save significant time and effort. The TitanXT Midjourney Automation Suite is designed to help you do just that, letting you focus more on creativity.
In Summary
Exploring prompt libraries is a smart way to improve your AI work. They provide tested examples you can use directly or modify. Whether you need prompts for writing, design, images, or specialized tasks, these free resources offer a great starting point. Find the ones that best suit your needs and see how they can help you get better results from your favorite AI tools.






