Prompt Engineering Guide for Skema3D Fashion Workflows
Write better prompts in Skema3D with a practical framework for fit, construction, styling, and revision control.
Prompt quality drives workflow quality
Weak prompts create noisy outputs and wasted revision cycles. Strong prompts encode clear design intent and constraints.
In Skema, prompting should be treated as a repeatable design skill.
Use a four-part prompt structure
Structure every prompt with category, fit, construction, and styling direction.
This keeps outputs predictable and easier to review.
- Garment type and use context
- Fit and silhouette language
- Construction constraints
- Styling and finish direction
Add boundary rules
Include what must stay fixed and what can vary. This prevents output drift during iteration.
Boundary rules are essential for team collaboration.
Iterate in passes, not rewrites
Revise prompts by one dimension at a time so changes are diagnosable.
Track each pass by intent and outcome for faster learning.
Prompt QA checklist
Before approving a prompt template, verify clarity and repeatability.
- Terms are concrete and visualizable
- Constraints are explicit
- Fixed vs variable elements are clear
- Outputs are consistent across multiple runs