Startups that only have a wordmark or symbol
When branding is still minimal, plush transformations create a friendlier visual system without rebuilding the whole brand.
Many early-stage brands only have a static logo and no character system. This use case helps teams translate logo shapes, colors, and brand tone into a plush-style identity that can actually appear on landing pages, product launches, social cards, and lightweight campaigns.
When branding is still minimal, plush transformations create a friendlier visual system without rebuilding the whole brand.
A plush logo character can quickly become a reusable hero for product updates, waitlist pushes, and email banners.
You can compare plain-logo pages vs plush-logo pages and measure which variant gets better dwell and sharing.
Use-case assets for this page are now organized and shown directly.












Write a clear Jellycat style plush prompt and JellyMate will generate a live image result.
Best prompts mention the subject, plush texture, emotional tone, and intended scene.
Use square for toy cards and vertical for hero or social concepts.
Optional. Add a public image URL or upload a reference image to preserve a subject identity.

Example Preview
The preview starts with an example image and switches to your generated result.
Your latest image generations will appear here on this device.
Name the key shapes and color constraints first so the plush variant still feels unmistakably yours.
Choose calm, playful, premium, or bold. Mixing tones in one run usually weakens the result.
Generate multiple crop contexts in one pass so the same character works across page hero, social, and newsletter.
Not if tone is controlled. Keep palette discipline, clean composition, and one clear emotional direction.
No. This page is exactly for teams that only have a logo and want a first character layer quickly.
Start with landing hero, campaign social posts, and newsletter headers where recall impact is easiest to observe.