Create a cozy, vintage-style autonomous language-learning card inspired by old National Geographic maps. Use warm sepia tones, soft faded colors, antique map textures, gentle paper grain, and subtle hand-drawn cartographic details. The vibe should feel exploratory, reflective, and intimate—like a traveler’s notebook page. On the card, lay out the following reflective self-learning prompts in a clean but slightly weathered typography, as if printed on old map paper: ‘Write down all the languages that you know.’ ‘Write the name of each language in the language itself, or list all the names of the languages you know.’ ‘Which is this language for you? Is it your second, third, or tenth language? Mark: L2, L3, L10…’ ‘Insert one word you love from this language—this word becomes the name for your whole learning process.’ ‘How comfortable do you feel speaking this language with a friend who speaks it fluently?’ ‘Which elements of the language are particularly difficult for you right now, and which parts feel easy?’
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
Front cover illustration for an 8.5 x 11 inch paperback ADHD Homework Planner for students, KDP style. Flat, clean, minimal vector design. Background: solid deep violet / purple, similar to a modern academic planner. In the center, a large white rounded rectangle card, like a page of a notebook, centered vertically. On the violet background, add a few simple circles and shapes in soft purple, light turquoise and light green in the corners, matching a colorful planner layout, but NOT too busy. Inside the white card, leave a big empty area in the upper half for the book title (no real text, just blank space). Below the empty title area, add three tiny, simple line icons in a row: – a checklist icon, – a small clock icon, – a thought cloud icon. Use violet and orange accents for these icons. Overall mood: ADHD‑friendly, positive, teen‑friendly, high contrast but not overwhelming, plenty of white space, no 3D mockups, no shadows, no logo, no watermark, no spine, no back cover — FRONT COVER ART ONLY. High resolution, 300 dpi, suitable for KDP 8.5 x 11 workbook cover.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
A flat and simple template of an open book with two pages visible side by side. The pages are blank, and the book is shown in a minimalistic design with no prominent texture or 3D effects. The book has a soft, smooth surface with a subtle outline of the spine. The background is neutral and plain, with no shadows or strong lighting, creating a clean and flat look. The focus is on the shape and layout of the open pages, perfect for adding content later.
Create a cozy, vintage-style autonomous language-learning card inspired by old National Geographic maps. Use warm sepia tones, soft faded colors, antique map textures, gentle paper grain, and subtle hand-drawn cartographic details. The vibe should feel exploratory, reflective, and intimate—like a traveler’s notebook page. On the card, lay out the following reflective self-learning prompts in a clean but slightly weathered typography, as if printed on old map paper: ‘Write down all the languages that you know.’ ‘Write the name of each language in the language itself, or list all the names of the languages you know.’ ‘Which is this language for you? Is it your second, third, or tenth language? Mark: L2, L3, L10…’ ‘Insert one word you love from this language—this word becomes the name for your whole learning process.’ ‘How comfortable do you feel speaking this language with a friend who speaks it fluently?’ ‘Which elements of the language are particularly difficult for you right now, and which parts feel easy?’
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
A flat and simple template of an open book with two pages visible side by side. The pages are blank, and the book is shown in a minimalistic design with no prominent texture or 3D effects. The book has a soft, smooth surface with a subtle outline of the spine. The background is neutral and plain, with no shadows or strong lighting, creating a clean and flat look. The focus is on the shape and layout of the open pages, perfect for adding content later.
Front cover illustration for an 8.5 x 11 inch paperback ADHD Homework Planner for students, KDP style. Flat, clean, minimal vector design. Background: solid deep violet / purple, similar to a modern academic planner. In the center, a large white rounded rectangle card, like a page of a notebook, centered vertically. On the violet background, add a few simple circles and shapes in soft purple, light turquoise and light green in the corners, matching a colorful planner layout, but NOT too busy. Inside the white card, leave a big empty area in the upper half for the book title (no real text, just blank space). Below the empty title area, add three tiny, simple line icons in a row: – a checklist icon, – a small clock icon, – a thought cloud icon. Use violet and orange accents for these icons. Overall mood: ADHD‑friendly, positive, teen‑friendly, high contrast but not overwhelming, plenty of white space, no 3D mockups, no shadows, no logo, no watermark, no spine, no back cover — FRONT COVER ART ONLY. High resolution, 300 dpi, suitable for KDP 8.5 x 11 workbook cover.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
Create a cozy, vintage-style autonomous language-learning card inspired by old National Geographic maps. Use warm sepia tones, soft faded colors, antique map textures, gentle paper grain, and subtle hand-drawn cartographic details. The vibe should feel exploratory, reflective, and intimate—like a traveler’s notebook page. On the card, lay out the following reflective self-learning prompts in a clean but slightly weathered typography, as if printed on old map paper: ‘Write down all the languages that you know.’ ‘Write the name of each language in the language itself, or list all the names of the languages you know.’ ‘Which is this language for you? Is it your second, third, or tenth language? Mark: L2, L3, L10…’ ‘Insert one word you love from this language—this word becomes the name for your whole learning process.’ ‘How comfortable do you feel speaking this language with a friend who speaks it fluently?’ ‘Which elements of the language are particularly difficult for you right now, and which parts feel easy?’
Front cover illustration for an 8.5 x 11 inch paperback ADHD Homework Planner for students, KDP style. Flat, clean, minimal vector design. Background: solid deep violet / purple, similar to a modern academic planner. In the center, a large white rounded rectangle card, like a page of a notebook, centered vertically. On the violet background, add a few simple circles and shapes in soft purple, light turquoise and light green in the corners, matching a colorful planner layout, but NOT too busy. Inside the white card, leave a big empty area in the upper half for the book title (no real text, just blank space). Below the empty title area, add three tiny, simple line icons in a row: – a checklist icon, – a small clock icon, – a thought cloud icon. Use violet and orange accents for these icons. Overall mood: ADHD‑friendly, positive, teen‑friendly, high contrast but not overwhelming, plenty of white space, no 3D mockups, no shadows, no logo, no watermark, no spine, no back cover — FRONT COVER ART ONLY. High resolution, 300 dpi, suitable for KDP 8.5 x 11 workbook cover.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
A flat and simple template of an open book with two pages visible side by side. The pages are blank, and the book is shown in a minimalistic design with no prominent texture or 3D effects. The book has a soft, smooth surface with a subtle outline of the spine. The background is neutral and plain, with no shadows or strong lighting, creating a clean and flat look. The focus is on the shape and layout of the open pages, perfect for adding content later.
Create a cozy, vintage-style autonomous language-learning card inspired by old National Geographic maps. Use warm sepia tones, soft faded colors, antique map textures, gentle paper grain, and subtle hand-drawn cartographic details. The vibe should feel exploratory, reflective, and intimate—like a traveler’s notebook page. On the card, lay out the following reflective self-learning prompts in a clean but slightly weathered typography, as if printed on old map paper: ‘Write down all the languages that you know.’ ‘Write the name of each language in the language itself, or list all the names of the languages you know.’ ‘Which is this language for you? Is it your second, third, or tenth language? Mark: L2, L3, L10…’ ‘Insert one word you love from this language—this word becomes the name for your whole learning process.’ ‘How comfortable do you feel speaking this language with a friend who speaks it fluently?’ ‘Which elements of the language are particularly difficult for you right now, and which parts feel easy?’
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
A flat and simple template of an open book with two pages visible side by side. The pages are blank, and the book is shown in a minimalistic design with no prominent texture or 3D effects. The book has a soft, smooth surface with a subtle outline of the spine. The background is neutral and plain, with no shadows or strong lighting, creating a clean and flat look. The focus is on the shape and layout of the open pages, perfect for adding content later.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
Front cover illustration for an 8.5 x 11 inch paperback ADHD Homework Planner for students, KDP style. Flat, clean, minimal vector design. Background: solid deep violet / purple, similar to a modern academic planner. In the center, a large white rounded rectangle card, like a page of a notebook, centered vertically. On the violet background, add a few simple circles and shapes in soft purple, light turquoise and light green in the corners, matching a colorful planner layout, but NOT too busy. Inside the white card, leave a big empty area in the upper half for the book title (no real text, just blank space). Below the empty title area, add three tiny, simple line icons in a row: – a checklist icon, – a small clock icon, – a thought cloud icon. Use violet and orange accents for these icons. Overall mood: ADHD‑friendly, positive, teen‑friendly, high contrast but not overwhelming, plenty of white space, no 3D mockups, no shadows, no logo, no watermark, no spine, no back cover — FRONT COVER ART ONLY. High resolution, 300 dpi, suitable for KDP 8.5 x 11 workbook cover.
Create a cozy, vintage-style autonomous language-learning card inspired by old National Geographic maps. Use warm sepia tones, soft faded colors, antique map textures, gentle paper grain, and subtle hand-drawn cartographic details. The vibe should feel exploratory, reflective, and intimate—like a traveler’s notebook page. On the card, lay out the following reflective self-learning prompts in a clean but slightly weathered typography, as if printed on old map paper: ‘Write down all the languages that you know.’ ‘Write the name of each language in the language itself, or list all the names of the languages you know.’ ‘Which is this language for you? Is it your second, third, or tenth language? Mark: L2, L3, L10…’ ‘Insert one word you love from this language—this word becomes the name for your whole learning process.’ ‘How comfortable do you feel speaking this language with a friend who speaks it fluently?’ ‘Which elements of the language are particularly difficult for you right now, and which parts feel easy?’
A flat and simple template of an open book with two pages visible side by side. The pages are blank, and the book is shown in a minimalistic design with no prominent texture or 3D effects. The book has a soft, smooth surface with a subtle outline of the spine. The background is neutral and plain, with no shadows or strong lighting, creating a clean and flat look. The focus is on the shape and layout of the open pages, perfect for adding content later.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
Front cover illustration for an 8.5 x 11 inch paperback ADHD Homework Planner for students, KDP style. Flat, clean, minimal vector design. Background: solid deep violet / purple, similar to a modern academic planner. In the center, a large white rounded rectangle card, like a page of a notebook, centered vertically. On the violet background, add a few simple circles and shapes in soft purple, light turquoise and light green in the corners, matching a colorful planner layout, but NOT too busy. Inside the white card, leave a big empty area in the upper half for the book title (no real text, just blank space). Below the empty title area, add three tiny, simple line icons in a row: – a checklist icon, – a small clock icon, – a thought cloud icon. Use violet and orange accents for these icons. Overall mood: ADHD‑friendly, positive, teen‑friendly, high contrast but not overwhelming, plenty of white space, no 3D mockups, no shadows, no logo, no watermark, no spine, no back cover — FRONT COVER ART ONLY. High resolution, 300 dpi, suitable for KDP 8.5 x 11 workbook cover.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
Create a cozy, vintage-style autonomous language-learning card inspired by old National Geographic maps. Use warm sepia tones, soft faded colors, antique map textures, gentle paper grain, and subtle hand-drawn cartographic details. The vibe should feel exploratory, reflective, and intimate—like a traveler’s notebook page. On the card, lay out the following reflective self-learning prompts in a clean but slightly weathered typography, as if printed on old map paper: ‘Write down all the languages that you know.’ ‘Write the name of each language in the language itself, or list all the names of the languages you know.’ ‘Which is this language for you? Is it your second, third, or tenth language? Mark: L2, L3, L10…’ ‘Insert one word you love from this language—this word becomes the name for your whole learning process.’ ‘How comfortable do you feel speaking this language with a friend who speaks it fluently?’ ‘Which elements of the language are particularly difficult for you right now, and which parts feel easy?’
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.
A flat and simple template of an open book with two pages visible side by side. The pages are blank, and the book is shown in a minimalistic design with no prominent texture or 3D effects. The book has a soft, smooth surface with a subtle outline of the spine. The background is neutral and plain, with no shadows or strong lighting, creating a clean and flat look. The focus is on the shape and layout of the open pages, perfect for adding content later.
Front cover illustration for an 8.5 x 11 inch paperback ADHD Homework Planner for students, KDP style. Flat, clean, minimal vector design. Background: solid deep violet / purple, similar to a modern academic planner. In the center, a large white rounded rectangle card, like a page of a notebook, centered vertically. On the violet background, add a few simple circles and shapes in soft purple, light turquoise and light green in the corners, matching a colorful planner layout, but NOT too busy. Inside the white card, leave a big empty area in the upper half for the book title (no real text, just blank space). Below the empty title area, add three tiny, simple line icons in a row: – a checklist icon, – a small clock icon, – a thought cloud icon. Use violet and orange accents for these icons. Overall mood: ADHD‑friendly, positive, teen‑friendly, high contrast but not overwhelming, plenty of white space, no 3D mockups, no shadows, no logo, no watermark, no spine, no back cover — FRONT COVER ART ONLY. High resolution, 300 dpi, suitable for KDP 8.5 x 11 workbook cover.
Draw the character from the image "Richard." On a bright white background, freely distribute full-body drawings, close-ups of the face, small doodles, spontaneous sketches, and chibi versions so that the page conveys the character's mood, personality, and essence. Don't approach it like a structured character sheet, but rather like a sketchbook filled with spontaneously drawn ideas. Use thick, simple, and slightly messy lines that resemble hand-drawn sketches. Add anime-style illustrations, vibrant colors with strong contrast, random notes, handwritten phrases, and small doodles placed naturally among the images. Include details about his personality, tastes, profession, dreams, habits, favorite objects, colors that represent his essence, and small symbolic elements related to his life. Maintain a soft color palette and gentle expressions, but allow for a free, irregular, artistic, and emotional style. Make it look like a real page torn from your creative notebook.