Image · wan-video/wan-2.7-image-pro
WAN 2.7 Image Pro — 4K and thinking mode
WAN 2.7 Image Pro is the senior WAN branch for images. It is strong because it does three things at once: text-to-image up to 4K with thoughtful composition, multi-image editing from references, and image-set mode — a series of related frames from a single prompt. Useful when you need a cohesive set, not a single hero shot.
Where Image Pro shines
- 4K result with no separate upscaler — ad layouts and banners at print sizes.
- Multi-image editing: feed several references, the model assembles the frame from all of them.
- Image set: up to 12 related frames per run — series for social, season covers.
WAN 2.7 Image Pro vs Imagen 4 Ultra / GPT Image 2
Google’s Imagen 4 Ultra is the photoreal “stock-grade” option for light and colour. GPT Image 2 owns sharp legible text and strict typography in-frame.
WAN 2.7 Image Pro wins when 4K out of the box and a coherent series matter. For a one-off image, compare with Nano Banana Pro and Imagen 4 Ultra; for a series, Image Pro is unmatched on set coherence.
What you need on input
A prompt is required. For multi-image editing — several references. Sizes from 1K to 4K with fixed aspect ratios or arbitrary resolution up to 4096×4096.
Thinking mode applies to single text-to-image runs — the model spends extra time parsing the prompt for a more careful frame. It is not available for image-set.
Frequently asked about WAN 2.7 Image Pro
What does thinking mode buy you?
An extra reasoning pass before rendering. On long conditional prompts (“left has this, right has that, both look toward…”) composition is more stable.
How many frames in an image-set?
Up to 12 per run. Useful for series: a character across seasons, key scenes, episode covers.
Is 4K always necessary?
No. 4K pays off for print and large banners. For web and social, 2K is usually enough — faster and cheaper.
Does it understand non-English prompts?
It handles basic ones, but for complex phrasing and proper nouns English is safer — that is the general rule for all WAN models.