How to Keep a Consistent Art Style Across Your AI Webtoon

June 21, 2026

The short answer to keeping a webtoon on-model is to stop leaving style to chance and start giving the AI your own references. When you upload your art style and your character drawings up front, every panel is generated to match what you already have in mind, instead of drifting toward a generic look. This post walks through how that works inside AudioProducer.ai, and what to do when a panel still wanders off-style.

Why on-model consistency is the hard part of comics

A novel is hundreds of pages of one consistent voice. A webtoon is hundreds of panels that all have to look like the same world drew them. The faces have to match from episode one to episode forty. The line weight, the color palette, and the way a character's jacket falls all have to hold steady while the story keeps moving. Doing that by hand is slow, and most writers who have a story ready do not also have the months it takes to draw every frame.

This is the gap comic and webtoon mode is built for. The creator brings the look and the cast, and the AI handles the labor-intensive in-betweening: splitting the prose into pages and panels, drawing each panel in your style, lettering the speech bubbles, and laying out covers. The goal is to amplify the art you already make, so the finished strip reads as yours rather than as something a machine guessed at.

Upload your own images as style references

The first anchor is the style reference. Alongside the built-in art-style catalogue, you can upload your own images as personal style references, and they are applied to every generation in the issue. If you have a sketchbook, a few finished pages, or a mood set that captures your line and palette, those become the baseline the panels are measured against. The catalogue is a fine starting point when you want to move fast, and the upload path is there when you have a signature look you want every panel to respect.

Import works the same way a book project does. You upload an EPUB, or paste and add chapters for anything that is not an EPUB, and each chapter becomes a comic issue. The style reference you set rides along with that issue, so a forty-chapter serial keeps one visual identity from the first page to the last.

Character reference images that stay consistent across panels

Style holds the world together, and character references hold the cast together. When a chapter is analyzed, the AI extracts the characters from the text and writes an editable appearance description for each one. Every character then gets a reference image, either AI-generated from that description or uploaded from your own hand-drawn character art. That reference is what keeps a character on-model, holding the same face and costume panel after panel and page after page.

If you already draw your cast, uploading those drawings is the most direct way to lock them in. If you are starting from prose alone, you can generate the reference, adjust the appearance description until it matches your intent, and regenerate. Once the reference looks right, it carries that character through the rest of the issue.

Per-panel scene prompts and variations

Inside a page, the AI splits the chapter into panels with varied layouts, and each panel carries an editable scene prompt that drives its image. That is where you do the fine tuning. You can rewrite a scene prompt to change the framing, attach a specific character reference to that panel so the right person stays on-model, generate variations and pick the strongest one, or upload an image directly when you have exactly the frame you want. Pages themselves are editable too: add, remove, merge, or reorder them, and switch a page's layout when the pacing calls for it.

Fixing a panel that drifts off-style

Even with references set, a single panel will sometimes come back wrong: a face that reads as a stranger, a palette that slid warm, a pose that broke the line. You do not have to redo the issue to fix it. Re-attach the character reference to that panel and regenerate just that frame. Tighten the scene prompt to describe what the panel got wrong. Pull a fresh variation and swap it in. If a panel is close but the bubble placement is off, the speech-bubble editor lets you drag bubbles around, resize them so the text auto-fits, change the bubble type, and aim the tail, all without touching the art. Bigger resets, like re-analyzing pages from scratch or regenerating every image, are confirmation-gated, so a stray click will not wipe a chapter you have already tuned.

How AudioProducer.ai fits

AudioProducer.ai treats comics and webtoons as a creation mode alongside audiobooks and podcasts. You import the same novel you would turn into audio, choose a print-ready comic book or a vertical-scroll webtoon, set your style and characters, and export through the job queue with a download link when the issue is ready. If you are coming at this from the writing side, the same source novel can also become an AI audiobook, and the broader walkthroughs on turning a novel into a webtoon, turning a novel into a comic book, and making an AI comic from your story cover the rest of the flow. You keep your copyright on the work you bring, and you should only upload art and characters you have the rights to use. Comic mode availability and pricing vary, so check the current details on the site rather than assuming a plan or allowance.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I keep my characters looking the same across every panel?
Each character gets a reference image, generated from its appearance description or uploaded from your own drawing, and that reference is applied across panels and pages to keep the character on-model. If a panel drifts, re-attach the reference and regenerate just that frame.
Can I use my own art style instead of a generic AI look?
Yes. Alongside the built-in style catalogue you can upload your own images as personal style references, and they are applied to every generation in the issue, so panels follow your line and palette. Only upload art you are authorized to use.
What can I export, and which plans include comic mode?
A finished issue renders to a print-ready PDF for a comic book or a vertical-scroll strip for a webtoon, delivered through the job queue with a download link. Comic mode availability and pricing are not fixed here, so check the current plan details on the site for what is included.

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