How to Use DojoClip Design Agent: Single Page, Matching Set, or Multi-Page
A complete walkthrough of DojoClip Design Agent: what to type, what happens after you send it, how to review the plan before you spend credits, and how to export your finished designs.
Design Agent turns a short written brief into finished, editable designs. You describe what you need in plain language, the agent plans it, and you approve the plan before anything is generated.
This guide walks through the whole flow: what to type, what you should expect to see, and what to do once you are happy with the result.
Open it here: DojoClip Design Agent.
Choose what you are making
The first decision is what you are making. Design Agent uses simple choices based on how the finished work will be used:
| Choice | Use it for | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Single page | One poster, flyer, menu, gift card, or ad | One editable page |
| Matching set | 2–6 separate designs for products, offers, or campaign variants | Designs that share one visual style but work on their own |
| Multi-page | 2–8 pages read in order as a brochure, guide, catalog, or menu | Pages with different roles in one publication |
The simplest way to choose: if each design can stand on its own, use Matching set. If people read the pages from start to finish, use Multi-page.
Multi-page only appears when it is available. If you see only Single page and Matching set, the multi-page feature is not enabled for that workspace yet.

Step 1: Choose your target size first
Before your first prompt, pick the canvas size. The agent composes the layout for the format you choose, so changing it later means regenerating.
Presets include Social poster (1080 × 1350), Square post (1080 × 1080), Story/Reel (1080 × 1920), A4 portrait (1240 × 1754), Photo 4:3, Wide banner, and Long image.
A quick rule:
- Instagram, general social → Social poster or Square post
- Stories, Reels, TikTok → Story/Reel
- Anything you will print or export as PDF → A4 portrait

Once you pick a size, the panel collapses to a single row so the chat has room. Click that row any time to change it.
Step 2: Single page — the fastest path
Pick Single page, type your brief, and press Generate draft.
What to type. Describe the job, not the pixels. Say what it is for, who it is for, and the exact words that must appear:
A launch poster for a neighborhood bakery. Warm and premium, not cheap.
Headline: "Fresh from 6am". Offer: "Two croissants for $5, opening week".
Audience: local morning commuters. Goal: bring people in before 9am.
What you should expect. A finished, editable design in the size you picked. Not a rough sketch — a composed layout with real typography and hierarchy.
What not to type. Do not describe the layout pixel by pixel ("logo top-left at 40px"). The agent is the art director; that is its job. Tell it the goal and the exact copy, and let it compose.
You can also attach images before you send:
- Add image — a picture that must appear in the design, like your product.
- Style reference — a picture used only for typography, color, spacing, and visual energy. Its products, people, logos, and wording are never copied into your design.
That distinction matters. A style reference guides the look. An added image is content.
Step 3: Matching set — separate designs, one style
Choose Matching set when you need separate designs that belong together: three product posters, four offers, or several campaign versions.
Images are optional. For a text-only set, upload nothing and say, "Use only text, color, and simple shapes." For a product set, attach the product images with Add image. You can also add an optional Style reference.
What to type. Give every design a name and its exact copy. If you uploaded images, also say which image belongs to each design:
Create a matching set of three separate sales posters. Each poster must work on its own.
1. Focus Bottle — $29 — "Hydration that keeps up" — use focus-bottle.png
2. Flow Bottle — $35 — "Built for every workout" — use flow-bottle.png
3. Calm Bottle — $32 — "Slow down. Drink well." — use calm-bottle.png
Audience: young professionals. Goal: drive online purchases.
Keep one recognizable campaign identity with controlled layout variation.
Use the style reference only for typography, color, spacing, and energy.

What you should expect. One of two things:
- The agent confirms it created three designs in the set and starts planning, or
- It asks one short question — and only when something essential is genuinely missing, such as which image belongs to which product.
If it asks, answer plainly and it will continue:
image-1.png is Focus Bottle at $29.
image-2.png is Flow Bottle at $35.
image-3.png is Calm Bottle at $32.
Use exactly these names and prices.
It will not invent a price, and it will not ask the same question twice.
Step 4: Review the plan before you spend anything
This is the most important step, and the one people skip.
Before generating, an art director pass produces a collection plan. Click Review plan to see it. Planning and approval cost zero credits — nothing is generated and nothing is charged until you press the generate button.

Check these four things:
- Exact copy — every name, price, and headline, character for character.
- Image assignments — the right product image is bound to the right item.
- Shared rules — palette, typography, logo, and spacing that hold the set together.
- Layout families — a balanced set should show controlled variation, not three clones and not three unrelated posters.
The panel also shows the item count and the exact credit quote. Generation costs 1 credit per design by default, so a three-design set is three credits — but always trust the quote shown on the plan, since it is the number you will actually be charged.
Anything wrong? Edit the plan version, or click Edit details to adjust items, consistency, and asset bindings directly. Then press Approve 3-item plan.
Approval still charges nothing. It only freezes the plan.
Step 5: Generate
Press Generate 3 designs. This is the step that starts generation and charges credits.
Items generate one at a time and each one appears as it finishes. Watch for the progress line — 2 of 3 ready — and per-item states: planned, queued, generating, validating, ready, failed.

What you should expect. Every design carries the exact copy you supplied, the correct product image, and a shared identity — with intentional layout variation between items.
If one item fails. The others are unaffected and stay finished. Failed items keep their plan and inputs, you get a retry action for just those items, and a failed item's credits are refunded on their own. One bad item never costs you the whole set.
Step 6: Change your mind — scoped editing
Once your set is ready you can revise it without regenerating everything. Choose a scope, then describe the change:
- This item — "Make this poster's headline larger and improve its contrast."
- Selected — tick two designs, then "Give the selected designs a brighter offer badge."
- Entire set — "Make prices easier to scan across the entire set."
Only the chosen scope regenerates, and the impact and credit count are shown before you commit. For Multi-page the same control reads This page | Selected | All pages.

Your exact copy and image bindings are preserved through a scoped edit — you are changing the visual treatment, not the content.
Step 7: Multi-page — pages read in order
When Multi-page is available, it reuses everything above with one difference: pages have narrative roles and a reading order.
What to type. List the pages in order, with each page's exact copy. Mark any page that is nice-to-have as optional:
Create a 4-page buyer's guide for our bottle range.
Page 1 — Cover. Title: "Hydration that keeps up". Subtitle: "The 2026 bottle guide".
Page 2 — "Choose your bottle": compare Focus Bottle at $29 for desk work and
Flow Bottle at $35 for training. Use focus-bottle.png on this page.
Page 3 — "How we build them": one paragraph on materials, insulation, and the
10-year warranty. Use flow-bottle.png on this page.
Page 4 — Back cover: "Drink well every day" with the store link drinkwell.example.
This page is optional.
Audience: young professionals. Keep one calm, editorial identity across all pages.
What you should expect. Pages that read as one publication, each composed for its job: a cover that opens, body pages that inform, and a closing page that resolves quietly. A body page should never look like a poster.

Optional pages matter at export time: a required page that is missing or failed will block your PDF, while an optional one is simply skipped and reported.
Step 8: You are happy — now export
Single page. Export straight to PNG or JPEG.
Matching set. Open the export panel and choose a scope — Current, Selected, or All — plus PNG or JPEG. You get a ZIP with:
- ordered, predictable filenames (
01-Focus-Bottle.png,02-Flow-Bottle.png, …) numbered by set order - a
manifest.jsonlisting every file, plus anything that was omitted and why
Multi-page. Export all pages as an ordered PDF, or as a PNG/JPEG ZIP. A PDF always includes every page in reading order.

Two useful behaviors:
- Repeat exports are free and instant. Ask for the same export twice and you get the same finished archive back rather than a re-render.
- Edit a design and the next export rebuilds it. New content always means a fresh archive, so you never download stale pixels.
Quick troubleshooting
"I sent a prompt and nothing happened." Check the chat column on the left — the agent's reply is there. The center panel stays on its empty state until items are actually configured.
"I cannot see Multi-page." It is not enabled for that workspace yet, so Design Agent hides the choice. Use Single page for one finished page or Matching set for several designs that can stand on their own.
"The prices came out wrong." Put exact values in the brief ($29, not "about thirty dollars") and check them on the plan review screen before approving. The agent never invents a price — but it can only preserve what you gave it.
"All my designs look the same." That is the consistency level. Balanced is the default; open Edit details and try Expressive for more variation, or Strict when you want near-identical siblings.
The short version
- Pick the target size first.
- Pick the choice: Single page for one design, Matching set for separate designs in one style, or Multi-page for pages read in order.
- Write one brief with exact copy, the audience, and the goal.
- Review the plan — it is free, and it is where you catch mistakes.
- Approve, then generate. That is when credits are charged.
- Fix anything with a scoped edit.
- Export: PNG/JPEG, a ZIP for a matching set, or an ordered PDF for multiple pages.
The habit worth building is step 4. Reviewing the plan takes twenty seconds, costs nothing, and is the difference between three perfect posters and three wrong ones.
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