Bokeh. That silky, creamy background blur that separates a professional photograph from an amateur snapshot. It's the effect that makes your subject pop against a dreamy wash of out-of-focus light — and it's one of the most searched-for effects in AI image generation.
The challenge? Most people type "blurry background" and get muddy, undefined results. The photographers who get stunning AI bokeh know exactly which words to use, how to describe aperture physics, and which lighting conditions make bokeh sing.
This guide gives you the complete vocabulary and prompt architecture to generate genuinely beautiful bokeh and depth of field effects with AI tools like Gemini, Midjourney, and DALL-E.
Understanding Bokeh for AI Prompts
Before writing prompts, understanding what creates bokeh in real photography will dramatically improve your AI results. AI models trained on photography understand these technical concepts — use them.
Bokeh (from the Japanese "boke," meaning blur or haze) is the aesthetic quality of the out-of-focus areas in a photograph. It's not just blur — it's the character of that blur: how it renders point light sources, how smooth the transition is, and how it separates subject from background.
Aperture
Wide aperture (low f-number like f/1.4, f/1.8) creates the most blur. Always specify this in prompts.Focal Length
Longer lenses (85mm, 135mm, 200mm) compress perspective and create more pronounced background separation.Subject-Background Distance
Greater distance between subject and background increases blur intensity. Describe this separation explicitly.Light Sources in Background
Point lights (fairy lights, city lights, candles) become the distinctive circular bokeh orbs that define the effect.Core Bokeh Prompt Vocabulary
These terms signal to AI models exactly what you want. Using precise photography language consistently improves results.
Technical Terms
shallow depth of fieldCore phrasef/1.4 apertureMaximum blur85mm f/1.8 lensPortrait classicbokeh backgroundBackground qualitycreamy bokehSmooth, soft blurlens blurGeneral blur termDescriptive Terms
circular bokeh orbsLight circlesout-of-focus backgroundClear separationsubject isolationFocus contrastdreamy backgroundSoft qualitybackground separationClear distinctionrazor-sharp focusSubject crispnessBokeh Portrait Prompts
Portraits are the most common use case for bokeh. These prompts are tested and refined for maximum impact.
close-up portrait of a woman with striking green eyes, 85mm f/1.4 lens, shallow depth of field, creamy bokeh background with soft circular light orbs, natural window light, sharp focus on eyes, photorealistic, professional photographyoutdoor portrait, young man with warm skin tones, golden hour sunlight as rim light, 135mm telephoto lens, extremely shallow depth of field, luminous bokeh with golden circular orbs, background of blurred autumn trees, sharp subject silhouette, film photography aestheticnighttime portrait, woman with dark hair, city street at night, 50mm f/1.2 lens, bokeh city lights transformed into glowing circular orbs in background, neon light color spill on face, face in sharp focus, urban night photography, photorealisticBokeh Types and How to Describe Them
Different contexts call for different bokeh characters. Master these descriptions to control exactly what your backgrounds look like.
Circular Bokeh
The classic effect — round, disc-shaped light orbscircular bokeh orbs, spherical light spots, round defocused highlightsSwirly Bokeh
Whirlpool-like, painterly swirling motion in blurswirly bokeh, helios 44-2 lens effect, vintage swirling background blurCreamy Bokeh
Smooth, uniform, featureless soft backgroundcreamy smooth bokeh, buttery background blur, featureless soft defocusCat-Eye Bokeh
Oval-shaped orbs from corner lens aberrationcat-eye bokeh, oval lens blur, anamorphic bokeh effectAnamorphic Bokeh
Horizontal oval orbs and blue lens flaresanamorphic lens bokeh, cinematic oval highlights, blue streak lens flaresNatural Bokeh
Organic, dappled light through foliagenatural bokeh, dappled forest light, organic background blur, sunlit leavesDepth of Field: Beyond Just Blur
Depth of field (DoF) describes the zone of acceptable sharpness — and understanding it opens creative techniques beyond simple background blur.
Tilt-Shift Effect
aerial view of a city street, tilt-shift photography effect, selective focus creating miniature toy-like appearance, blurred top and bottom thirds, sharp middle band, photorealistic miniature lookCreates the famous "miniature model" look by blurring the top and bottom of the frame while keeping a horizontal band sharp.Macro Depth of Field
extreme close-up macro photograph of a dewdrop on a spider web, 1:1 macro lens, ultra-shallow depth of field, only one dewdrop in sharp focus while others dissolve into dreamy bokeh, morning light, photorealistic nature photographyAt macro distances, even moderate apertures create extremely shallow focus — use this for dramatic effect.Deep Focus Contrast
Sometimes the power lies in using deep focus to contrast WITH shallow DoF conventions.
street scene with foreground flowers in extreme bokeh blur, middle distance pedestrian in sharp focus, background architecture in partial blur, three distinct focus planes, documentary photography style, natural lightLens-Specific Bokeh Prompts
Different lenses produce distinctly different bokeh characteristics. Referencing specific lenses in prompts triggers the AI's knowledge of those optical characteristics.
| Lens | Bokeh Character | Best For | Prompt Term |
|---|---|---|---|
| 85mm f/1.4 | Smooth, circular, classic | Portraits | 85mm portrait lens bokeh |
| 135mm f/2.0 | Buttery, compressed | Environmental portraits | 135mm telephoto blur |
| Helios 44-2 | Swirly, vintage, painterly | Artistic portraits | Helios 44 swirly bokeh |
| 50mm f/1.2 | Natural, slightly swirly | Street, documentary | 50mm f1.2 natural bokeh |
| Anamorphic | Oval, cinematic, with flares | Cinematic photography | anamorphic lens oval bokeh |
| Macro 100mm | Extreme, dissolving | Close-up subjects | macro lens extreme shallow focus |
Scene-Specific Bokeh Prompts
Different environments produce different bokeh characteristics. Match your bokeh to your scene for cohesive results.
Spring Garden Bokeh
portrait in a garden, cherry blossom trees behind, 200mm telephoto lens f/2.8, pink petals dissolving into soft pink and white bokeh orbs, spring afternoon light, subject in perfect sharp focus, dreamy romantic atmosphereCherry blossoms create naturally beautiful pink-toned bokeh fieldsUrban Night Bokeh
night portrait in Times Square, city lights creating a galaxy of colored bokeh behind subject, red, yellow, and blue circular light orbs, f/1.4 aperture, sharp face illuminated by ambient glow, cinematic night photographyCity lights at night are the perfect raw material for colorful bokeh orbsCandlelight Bokeh
indoor portrait lit by dozens of candles, warm amber bokeh from defocused candle flames, 85mm lens wide open, subject face warmly lit, background melting into golden circular glows, intimate romantic atmosphere, film grainCandle flames create warm amber bokeh with an organic, flame-shaped qualityForest Light Bokeh
portrait in misty forest, shafts of morning light breaking through canopy, natural dappled bokeh from leaves and sunlight, 85mm lens, subject in sharp focus, background dissolving into green and gold organic bokeh, ethereal forest atmosphereForest light creates organic, irregular bokeh with a natural beauty different from city lightsAdvanced Techniques: Foreground Bokeh
Most photographers only think about background bokeh. Foreground bokeh — blurred elements in front of the subject — adds depth and a cinematic quality.
Foreground Bokeh Technique
defocused wildflowers in extreme foreground blur, woman in sharp focus in middle distance, 85mm f/1.4, layered depth, flowers soft and colorful, subject crisp, background trees in secondary blurshot through out-of-focus wine glass edge, subject in background in sharp focus, foreground glass creating abstract curved blur, refraction effects, intimate perspectiveshooting through rainy window, water droplets in foreground bokeh, city street in background with bokeh lights, subject visible through glass, atmospheric layers, moody urban photographyCommon Mistakes and How to Fix Them
shallow depth of field, creamy bokeh, f/1.4 aperture, 85mm lenswith city lights in background, forest behind, candles in backgroundsharp focus on eyes, subject in crisp focus, face in perfect detailComplete Prompt Templates
Copy and customize these battle-tested templates:
[shot type] of [subject description], [lens specification] with shallow depth of field, [background description] dissolving into [bokeh type], [lighting description], sharp focus on [focus point], photorealistic professional photography[subject] in [nighttime location], [light source] creating circular bokeh orbs in background, [aperture] wide open, [color] glowing light balls filling background, subject in perfect focus, cinematic night photographyforeground [blurred element], [subject] in sharp focus in middle distance, background [environment] in secondary blur, multiple depth planes, [focal length] telephoto compression, natural [lighting] atmosphereFAQ: AI Bokeh Photography
Why does my AI bokeh look fake or artificial? AI bokeh looks artificial when the blur is applied uniformly without regard for depth. Use prompts that specify actual lens physics (focal length, aperture) and describe the spatial relationship between foreground, subject, and background.
Which AI tools produce the best bokeh? Gemini Image Generation and Midjourney V6+ handle bokeh particularly well because they're trained on extensive photography datasets. Use photography-specific vocabulary rather than design terminology for better results.
Can I control the bokeh color? Yes — by specifying the background light sources. City lights produce multicolor orbs, candles produce amber orbs, fairy lights produce white or warm orbs, and forest light produces green-gold organic blur.
Why does my subject look soft even when I specify sharp focus? Add explicit focus point terms: "razor-sharp focus on face," "tack-sharp eyes," "crisp subject detail." AI needs explicit instruction that the subject should remain fully sharp while the background blurs.
What's the difference between bokeh and motion blur? Bokeh is caused by depth/distance (out-of-focus areas), while motion blur is caused by movement. They're distinct effects. For bokeh, never use motion blur language — use "depth of field," "aperture," and "focus" terminology.
Create Stunning Bokeh Images Now
Use these prompts directly in our AI image studio to generate professional-quality bokeh photography. No camera or lens required — just the right words.Related Articles:

