When we first built Stickerbox, we wanted to make something simple: a box that turns imagination into art. But over time, we noticed something even better happening.
Kids weren’t just printing stickers. They were learning how to think creatively. How to describe ideas, mix concepts, and make something new out of nothing.
That’s what being a Super Prompter is all about.
1. Becoming a Super Prompter
A “prompt” is just the words you say to the Stickerbox.
But the right prompt? That’s your superpower.
Try this:
-
Instead of saying: “A cat.”
Say: “A cat wearing roller skates on the moon.” -
Instead of “A dragon.”
Say: “A tiny dragon guarding a pile of gummy bears.”
The longer, sillier, and more specific you get, the cooler your sticker becomes.
Super Prompters don’t worry about being perfect, they experiment. They say weird things, try new combos, and let their imagination do the work.
Pro tip: Add a twist. Use words like tiny, gigantic, sleepy, or graffiti style.
Those words are like creative turbo boosts.
2. Becoming a Super Creative
Once your Stickerbox prints your idea, your job’s not done.
That’s just the first draft. Super Creatives turn their sticker into something more:
- Try the same prompt with a new twist!
- Color it in wild new ways.
- Cut it out, layer it, or remix it with others.
- Tell a story with it! Every sticker can be part of a bigger adventure.
Ask yourself:
“What happens next?”
If your Stickerbox printed a “robot chef,” maybe the next day it prints the “restaurant with robot diners eating electronics.”
Now you’ve got a story, and a universe, growing right in your hands.
Pro tip: Make a “Sticker Journal.” Each day, print one new idea and write a tiny note next to it about what it means to you.
3. Becoming a Sticker Hero
Sticker Heroes don’t just make cool art. They share it. They trade, gift, and show their creations proudly. They use their stickers to spread kindness, laughter, or surprise.
Here are some of my favorite ideas from real kids:
- A “Kindness Sticker” (my favorite). Give this to someone having a hard day.
- A “Super You Sticker”. Imagine someone you know as a superhero, racecar driver, or dinosaur adventurer.
- A “Dynamic Duo”. One person makes a character, the other makes their best friend or rival.
When kids share what they create, they learn something powerful:
Creativity connects people.
Pro tip: Make a “Sticker Wall of Fame” at home — a fridge, corkboard, or wall where you celebrate every wild idea.
The Real Secret: Creativity Isn’t a skill, It’s a Muscle
Every time a child uses their imagination, even for a few seconds, that creative muscle grows stronger. The Stickerbox isn’t teaching kids to copy something on a screen. It’s teaching them to describe, design, and dream.
That’s why I believe creativity is the most important skill of the future. It’s not about technology, it’s about learning how to see the world differently.
So go ahead. Say something wild. Make something strange. Color it your way.
And remember: you’re not just printing stickers. You’re printing imagination.
Ready to level up? Grab your Stickerbox, take a deep breath, and say your first great prompt out loud:
“Stickerbox… show me the craziest dream anyone has ever had… graffiti style!”