Lovart: How I Created Pro-Quality Logos, Packaging, Posters and Video in 15 Minutes

Hello — I'm Fujii丈夫 (Fujii Tasuku), and in this post I'll walk you through how I used Lovart to turn a panicked client request into a complete, professional design package in about 15 minutes. If you've ever been told "Make a logo, package design and all the marketing assets by tomorrow," you know the feeling: sticky fingers, limited time, and no obvious path forward. That's exactly where Lovart stepped in for me, and I want to share the exact process, the strengths, the caveats, and real examples so you can decide whether Lovart belongs in your creative toolkit.

Table of Contents
- Why I tested Lovart (and why you should care)
- First impressions: dashboard and workflow
- Real test #1 — From text to a full logo system
- Real test #2 — Creating an energy drink brand package (Nexus Horse)
- Real test #3 — Video generation and dynamic assets
- Pricing, credits and real-world cost savings
- Where Lovart fits in your workflow
- My honest take: strengths and where to be careful
- Step-by-step: How I used Lovart, summarized
- FAQ — Common questions about Lovart
- Final thoughts — should you try Lovart?
Why I tested Lovart (and why you should care)
I get requests from clients that range from simple to impossible. The classic scenario: a client says, "Create logo, packaging, banners, and social media imagery — all by tomorrow." Traditionally, that would mean days of back-and-forth with a designer, or a rushed, inconsistent set of deliverables. I wanted to know if Lovart could reliably close that gap between concept and production quality.
Lovart bills itself as the world's first "design agent" AI focused entirely on design workflows. That specialization is important. Generalist AI tools can do lots of things, but they often miss the nuance of design deliverables: consistency, multi-format exports, and iterative alignment with brand vision. Lovart focuses on those needs, and the result was a surprisingly professional output in a fraction of the time.

First impressions: dashboard and workflow
Lovart's dashboard is clean and simple. There's a single prompt input area where you can write what you want, and below that you can see your projects and browse other users' ideas for inspiration. The interface doesn't overwhelm you with options; it guides you step-by-step, which is crucial when you're under time pressure.

What struck me immediately was how Lovart doesn't simply spit out outputs. Instead, it treats the design task like a collaborative conversation. After you type a rough brief — even a handful of keywords — Lovart proposes visual directions, asks clarifying questions, and shows initial mood-board style options. This "guided refinement" is what prevents the common mismatch you get with vague prompts ("Make it cool" → produces unpredictable results).
How Lovart guides the brief
- Initial prompt: you write a simple brief (e.g., brand name, vibe, use-case).
- Lovart replies with multiple visual directions and asks which is closest to your vision.
- You select 2–3 options, and Lovart generates refined design concepts based on those selections.
- It then expands the chosen concept into multi-format assets (icons, banners, thumbnails, print-ready files).
This conversational approach is why Lovart works for non-designers: it helps you translate a fuzzy idea like "sporty, futuristic, energetic" into concrete design parameters.

Real test #1 — From text to a full logo system
I started with a logo because it's the fastest way to evaluate a design system. I typed a short, rough brief and uploaded a couple of reference images. Instead of asking me to craft a perfect, long-winded prompt, Lovart presented several initial directions and asked, "Which idea is closest to what you want?" That question alone saved me so much iteration time.

Within minutes Lovart produced multiple logo concepts, each with different stylistic directions. It created:
- Futuristic monogram styles
- Geometric mark variations
- Hybrid designs mixing selected direction elements
Then Lovart expanded the chosen logo into usable formats automatically: a wide banner for YouTube channel art, a square icon for social profiles, static frames for logo animation, and a white-background variant ready for print. The system remembered my brief and continuously aligned subsequent outputs to the same brand direction, which is essential for brand consistency.

Real test #2 — Creating an energy drink brand package (Nexus Horse)
For a more demanding test, I told Lovart to design a complete marketing package for an energy drink called Nexus Horse. My brief included keywords like "sporty," "energetic," and "near-future." I expected basic mockups, but Lovart surprised me by generating an execution plan before a single pixel was produced. The plan outlined the sequence of assets:
- Can label designs (primary and secondary variants)
- Product hero images
- Advertising banners
- Social media post templates
- POS/retail posters
That planning step mimics what a design agency would do during the briefing phase — but it executed the plan in minutes instead of weeks.

Lovart first generated four distinct can-label directions. Each had a different feeling — one was raw and powerful, another felt almost like an epic alcoholic beverage label, and yet another had a polished, near-futuristic "potion" energy vibe. I selected the one that matched the brand persona I wanted and asked Lovart to produce ad banners and a promotional poster based on that selection.

From canned mockups to multi-format marketing
Lovart didn't stop at the can. It generated:
- Hero product photography composites
- Square and wide ad banners optimized for social feeds
- Poster layouts with headline and CTA variations
- Export-ready files in the formats used by printers and ad platforms
Then I did a neat test — I uploaded a photo from my own device (a portrait with sunglasses) and asked Lovart to place that person holding the can into a campaign poster. The result was natural and convincing: Lovart composited my image into multiple poster layouts, adjusting lighting and scale to match the design language. That step alone demonstrates how Lovart handles real-world production constraints: mixing user assets with generated elements cleanly and consistently.

Real test #3 — Video generation and dynamic assets
Beyond images, Lovart can generate videos. I asked for a short ASMR-style promotional video and Lovart produced it. The video generation feature is powerful, but it also consumes credits faster than static images, so plan accordingly. For frequent high-quality video production, you may need a higher-tier plan. Still, being able to generate rough-cut video concepts, animated logo frames, and product motion is a game changer for rapid campaign iteration.

The video output is not just a storyboard: it's a rendered short that can be used as a reference or even as the final asset for social platforms, depending on your needs. Again, Lovart's strength is how it ties visual identity across static and moving assets so everything feels part of the same brand system.
Pricing, credits and real-world cost savings
One of the most practical questions is: how does Lovart compare cost-wise to traditional outsourcing? I ran scenarios using typical external agency quotes and compared them to Lovart subscription costs.
Traditional outsourcing for a full design suite — logo, packaging, hero imagery, banners, and a few social outputs — can easily be in the ¥150,000–¥300,000+ range (or $1,000–$3,000+ depending on scope and market). With Lovart, the same assets are achievable on a monthly subscription basis.
- Pro plan: $90/month (approx ¥13,000) — best if you produce lots of assets and need video credits.
- Starter plan: $19/month (approx ¥2,600) — suitable for occasional projects and still supports commercial use.
- All plans allow commercial usage, but video credits are limited on lower tiers.
In simple terms, Lovart can reduce direct design costs to a fraction of agency fees and cut turnaround time exponentially. In my conservative comparison, a ¥150,000 one-off cost mapped to a Lovart subscription as low as ¥2,600/month for many use cases — a huge saving for small businesses, startups, and solo creators.

Credits and limitations
Be aware of two practical constraints:
- Video credits consume resources faster — the Starter/Basic plans limit high-quality video outputs, so heavy video users will want Pro.
- Some highly specialized industry outputs may still need a human specialist for final technical compliance (e.g., dielines for complex packaging, regulatory labeling).
For most creative and marketing use cases, however, Lovart handles the heavy lifting and leaves final polish or regulatory checks to the user or a specialist if needed.
Where Lovart fits in your workflow
Lovart is useful across many scenarios and industries. Here are a few examples I tested or saw working well:
- E-commerce campaigns: Create Black Friday banners, product hero shots, social posts, and email headers in one session.
- Startups: Bootstrap brand identity, packaging mockups, and launch visuals fast without a design team.
- Game development: Concept art, character design cues, UI mockups, and marketing trailers.
- Architecture & presentations: Visual proposals and presentation images for client pitches.
- Event marketing: Posters, stage backdrops, social ads, and hero videos for quick promotion.
The combination of plan-based pricing and the ability to generate multi-format assets makes Lovart especially efficient when you need consistent deliverables across digital and print channels.

My honest take: strengths and where to be careful
After using Lovart on several real-world tasks, here’s my candid assessment:
Major strengths
- Speed: A full set of brand assets in minutes rather than days or weeks.
- Consistency: Lovart keeps the visual language aligned across formats automatically.
- Usability: Non-designers can create professional assets thanks to guided prompts and iterative questions.
- Cost-efficiency: High potential savings compared to hiring external agencies or freelancers.
- Flexibility: Upload your own photos and elements and Lovart will integrate them into the design system.
Where to be cautious
- Video output consumes credits quickly — if you're a frequent video creator, expect to upgrade plans.
- Technical print requirements: For some industrial packaging use-cases (complex dielines, specific printing processes), a human designer or pre-press specialist is still recommended to confirm specifications.
- Distinctive, highly stylized artistic direction may still require a human artist to refine minute details, especially for flagship brand storytelling.
That said, most branding and marketing scenarios are well served by Lovart's outputs, especially when speed and budget are priorities.
Step-by-step: How I used Lovart, summarized
- Type a short, simple brief for the deliverable (e.g., "Nexus Horse energy drink — sporty, energetic, near-future").
- Review Lovart's initial visual directions and choose 2–3 that match your vision.
- Let Lovart generate multiple logo concepts and pick your favorite.
- Ask Lovart to expand the selected logo into multi-format assets (square icon, wide banner, white-background logo, animation frames).
- Request a product system (can labels, hero imagery, social templates, posters) — Lovart will suggest a production plan first.
- Upload any proprietary imagery (team photos, founder portraits) and ask Lovart to composite them into campaign assets.
- Generate short videos or animations if needed, keeping in mind credit consumption.
- Download the export-ready assets and, if necessary, perform final technical checks for print or broadcast.

FAQ — Common questions about Lovart
Q: Can I use Lovart outputs commercially?
A: Yes. Lovart allows commercial use across its plans, which makes it practical for business use — from startups to established brands.
Q: Do I need design skills to use Lovart?
A: No. Lovart is specifically built to lower the barrier to entry. Its guided prompts, visual selection steps, and automatic multi-format outputs make it friendly for non-designers.
Q: How long does it take to get usable assets?
A: For my tests, a basic logo system and a set of marketing assets were ready within 15–30 minutes. Complex projects with extensive iterations may take longer, but still far less time than traditional design cycles.
Q: Will Lovart replace designers?
A: Lovart accelerates and automates much of the routine and early-stage creative work, but skilled designers remain essential for high-stakes branding, deep strategy, and technical production requirements. Think of Lovart as a powerful collaborator that handles the heavy lifting.
Q: Which plan is right for me?
A: If you're experimenting or have occasional needs, the Starter plan (around $19/month) is a good entry point. If you produce a lot of assets and videos, the Pro plan ($90/month) gives you more credits and flexibility. Assess your expected video use carefully — video generation eats credits faster than static images.
Q: Can I import and export files for professional tools?
A: Yes. Lovart provides export-ready formats suitable for both digital platforms and print. For complex printing requirements, export and share with your print vendor or pre-press specialist for final confirmation.
Final thoughts — should you try Lovart?
If you need to produce consistent design assets quickly and affordably, Lovart is a powerful option. It's not a silver bullet for every possible design problem, but it supplies a reliable, fast, and surprisingly polished way to generate logos, packaging, posters, social media templates, and even videos. For startups, small agencies, marketers, and solo creators who need speed and consistency, Lovart can drastically reduce both cost and time.
My personal takeaway: Lovart became a dependable creative partner for tasks that used to require long agency cycles. The guided interaction, the automatic expansion from single assets to full design systems, and the ability to mix uploaded photos with generated elements made it easy to iterate until I reached the right result. It's not about replacing the human designer — it's about empowering faster, better-informed design choices and freeing human time for higher-value creative work.
If you want to experiment, start with a short brief and let Lovart show you how quickly an idea can become a set of real deliverables. In many cases, what used to take weeks is now possible in minutes.

Thanks for reading — I hope this walkthrough helps you understand how Lovart can transform your design workflow. If you try it, focus first on a single campaign and push Lovart to expand that one visual identity across formats; that's where you'll see the biggest efficiency gains.