Open Studio: One workspace for AI text, image, and video
How Open Studio brings AI text, image, and video work into one focused creative workspace.

Most AI products still treat text, image, and video as separate rooms. You write in one place, generate images somewhere else, then move to another tool for video. The work is technically possible, but the flow is fragmented.
Open Studio is designed around a simpler idea: creative work should stay in one workspace while the model changes underneath it.
Why the workspace matters
The real unit of work is not a prompt. It is a result: a product visual, a campaign poster, a character concept, a landing-page draft, a short video direction, or a piece of copy that supports the asset.
When these pieces live together, the user can keep context:
- The same project can hold text, image, and video conversations.
- The same sidebar can recover recent work.
- The same composer can switch from writing to generation without resetting the task.
- The same account and billing layer can make model access predictable.
That structure matters because AI work is iterative. Users rarely get the final result in one message. They compare, refine, remix, and return later.
A better home screen
The Open Studio home screen is moving away from generic prompt suggestions. The goal is to make each entry point describe the outcome the user wants.
Instead of presenting abstract prompt types, image creation starts with result launchers such as product promo images, photo scene edits, event posters, cinematic portraits, and character sheets.
The prompt still exists, but it becomes the engine behind the card. The user sees the result and the action.
One control plane
Open Studio keeps the user-visible state in the web app: authentication, plans, chat history, generation status, and recovery. Heavy model execution can happen in specialized services, but the user should not feel that distribution.
That is the product principle: the system can be distributed internally, but the experience should feel centered.
What comes next
The next phase is about making creation feel more recoverable and more direct. Long-running image and video jobs should show clear state. A refreshed session should resume the same work. Presets should become task launchers, not prompt galleries.
Open Studio is built for that direction: one studio, many models, and a workflow that keeps the result in focus.