Atelier by AIncient Labs

Images

Add images to a page and they're automatically responsive, right-sized, and fast — no settings to tune

Most sections take an image — the hero, a content block, a gallery, the cards in a grid. You add the image once; Atelier handles how it looks and loads everywhere it appears.

Adding an image

You have two ways, both in the Pages studio:

Pick from your library

When a section has an image, choose one from your media library or upload a new file. The preview updates immediately.

Ask the agent

Describe what you want — "use the warehouse photo for the hero" — and the agent finds a matching image in your library and places it. As always, it edits the draft; nothing changes on the live site until you Publish.

Images follow the same promise as everything else in the studio: the agent proposes, you review the preview, and you publish. See AI proposes, you approve.

They're responsive automatically

You never set sizes, crops, or formats. Once an image is in a section, Atelier:

  • Right-sizes it for where it sits — a full-width hero, a half-width content image, and a small gallery tile each get an appropriately sized image, so a phone never downloads a desktop-sized file.
  • Adapts to the layout — change a gallery from three columns to four, or rearrange the page, and each image resizes to its new place. It always fits its spot.
  • Stays crisp on every screen — high-resolution (retina) displays get a sharper version; ordinary screens don't pay for pixels they can't show.
  • Loads fast — images are served in modern, compact formats and sized to the device, so pages stay quick.

Tip

Because sizing and quality are handled for you, you can move sections and images around freely — the result always looks right and loads well. Focus on the story, not the image settings.

Describe your images for accessibility

Add alt text to an image in your media library — a short description of what it shows. Atelier uses it automatically wherever the image appears, so your pages stay accessible to screen readers and clearer to search engines. You write it once, on the image, not on every page that uses it.

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