Full disclosure: we built AutoKeyWorder. This is the per-platform reference for Displate specifically. For the cross-platform overview, see the complete feature guide.
Displate is a different kind of buyer than the stock platforms. People don’t license Displate posters, they buy them to hang on the wall. That completely changes what the AI should emphasize in titles, descriptions, and tags. AutoKeyWorder’s Displate prompt is retuned for decor buyers and fandom searches. Here’s how the controls work and what the extension actually fills on Displate’s upload form.
The Toggle Matrix on Displate
| Control | Works on Displate? |
|---|---|
| Context field | Yes |
| Enhanced quality | Yes (1 credit standard, 2 credits enhanced) |
| Mark as AI-generated | Hidden (Displate doesn’t have a disclosure field) |
| Overwrite existing titles | Yes (per-field) |
| Allow brand/trademark names | Yes (off by default — keep it off) |
| Process All | Yes |
| Process Selected | No — hidden on Displate |
Displate doesn’t expose a multi-select state in its upload UI, so Process Selected is hidden and you get Process All only. The AI-generated checkbox is also hidden here because Displate’s form doesn’t have a matching field.
Why Displate’s Metadata Is Different
On Adobe Stock, a photo of a cat gets keywords like animal, pet, cat, feline, domestic, cute, mammal. Those are search terms a stock buyer types.
On Displate, the same image needs tags like cat lover, animal art, cute poster, kitten wall art, pet decor, feline portrait. Those are search terms a home decorator types.
AutoKeyWorder’s Displate prompt is built around this shift. The AI emphasizes:
- Mood and aesthetic (dark academia, cottagecore, minimalist, vibrant)
- Room context (bedroom, office, dorm, gaming room)
- Fandom and subculture (when applicable: fantasy, sci-fi, gaming, anime, music)
- Color palette (warm tones, cool blues, black and white, neon)
- Style (illustration, photography, digital art, typography, vector)
The prompt is the same image analysis but a completely different keyword universe.
What the AI Fills on Displate
Title. Short and evocative. Displate’s title is the second thing a buyer sees after the thumbnail image. The prompt generates titles that describe the feeling or subject in 2-6 words, not keyword dumps.
Description. 1-2 sentences describing what the poster is and who it’s for. Displate buyers read descriptions when they’re on the fence, so the description is where you convert a scroll into a click.
Tags. Displate allows a generous tag count. AutoKeyWorder fills the full permitted set, ordered by search intent.
Collection suggestion. Displate organizes posters into artist collections. The AI suggests which of your existing collections this poster fits into, or flags when it should start a new one.
The Context Field on Displate
Context on Displate should describe the aesthetic and audience, not the literal subject. The AI already sees the subject.
Good Displate Context strings:
Dark academia aesthetic, gothic library, moody academia posterMinimalist cat art, Scandinavian home, modern decorCyberpunk Tokyo, neon nightlife, gaming room posterVintage botanical illustration, cottagecore bedroom aestheticSpace exploration poster, NASA inspired, dorm room decor
Without Context, the prompt generates decent generic decor language. With Context, the titles and tags land on the exact fandom, aesthetic, or room-style keywords that Displate buyers search.
Allow Brand Names: Keep It Off
This matters more on Displate than almost anywhere else. Displate is aggressive about trademark moderation, and the buyer base heavily searches for licensed properties (gaming characters, movie scenes, band logos, TV shows).
Fan art that references IP without a license risks takedown, account warnings, and in repeated cases, account suspension.
The Allow brand/trademark names toggle is off by default. Keep it off on Displate. The AI replaces character names with descriptive alternatives:
Mandalorian art→space warrior helmet art, sci-fi bounty hunter aestheticPokemon poster→cute monster creature art, pastel creature designMarvel superhero→comic book hero, retro superhero illustration
These still rank for Displate buyers who search by aesthetic or genre, without the legal exposure.
Turn the filter off only if you hold a license, or you’re uploading original art that coincidentally shares a color palette with something famous.
Process Selected Is Hidden
Displate’s upload form doesn’t expose a multi-select state, so Process Selected is hidden. You get Process All only.
Workarounds:
- One aesthetic per batch. Upload 20 cottagecore posters, Process All with cottagecore Context. Upload 20 gaming posters, Process All with gaming Context. Keep batches thematically consistent.
- Small test runs. Upload a single test poster, Process All (it’s one image), review the output. If it’s good, upload your batch and run.
Enhanced Quality on Displate
Enhanced quality is genuinely worth considering on Displate for artwork-heavy uploads. The standard model handles decor-photography fine (landscapes, botanicals, architectural shots). The advanced model does better work on:
- Illustration and digital art (picks up style nuance)
- Character art (grades fandom-adjacent tagging more precisely)
- Typography and quote posters (reads text and incorporates it into metadata)
- Surreal or abstract art (tags the mood instead of forcing literal subject keywords)
On a 30-poster batch split between photography and illustration, run the photography at standard and the illustrations at enhanced by uploading them as separate batches.
Overwrite on Displate
Per-field overwrite flag. If you’ve pre-titled your listings with something specific (say, an existing artist-series naming convention), leave Overwrite off. The AI fills the other fields and your titles stay.
If you want fresh metadata across the batch with no field carryover, turn Overwrite on.
The Displate Workflow
- Upload your artwork to Displate’s artist portal
- Open AutoKeyWorder, confirm Detected badge shows Displate
- Fill Context with aesthetic, audience, and room-style (heaviest lift on Displate — this changes everything downstream)
- Leave Allow brand names off
- Decide Enhanced quality (consider on for illustration-heavy batches)
- Click Process All (Process Selected is hidden)
- Review every filled field. Displate moderates tags actively, so check for anything that reads as IP reference
- Submit on Displate’s side
For the full Displate metadata strategy, including collection placement and how Displate’s search algorithm weights fields, see the dedicated Displate metadata playbook.
Known Limits on Displate
- Process Selected hidden. Every run is the whole visible batch.
- AI-generated checkbox hidden. Displate has no disclosure field.
- Displate’s tag moderation sometimes flags keywords that look borderline IP-adjacent even with the brand filter on. If a listing gets held for review, check the tags and remove anything that trips the filter.
- Collection auto-suggestion is a best guess. You’ll sometimes want to override the collection assignment manually.
For every other control and the cross-platform matrix, see the complete AutoKeyWorder feature guide.