Best OpenAI Models for AI Writer Image Generation

1. What the Image Helper Needs #

The AI Writer’s image helper is typically used for:

  • Featured images (hero images for posts).
  • Inline content images (illustrations inside articles).
  • Social/cover images (Pinterest, Twitter, etc.).

So we want models that are:

  • Visually strong and on-prompt (follow instructions well).
  • Capable of good composition and text rendering (for covers/banners).
  • Flexible in styles (photorealistic, illustration, historical art vibes, etc.).
  • Reasonably priced, since images are heavier than text.

2. OpenAI’s Image Models Today #

OpenAI’s current generation of image models is the GPT Image 1 family, which succeeds DALL·E 3: OpenAI Platform+2Zapier+2

  • gpt-image-1
    • State-of-the-art text→image model.
    • Natively multimodal (understands text + images).
    • Much better instruction following and text rendering than older DALL·E 3.
    • Flexible style control; good for hero images, product images, concept art, etc.
  • gpt-image-1-mini (shown in pricing docs) OpenAI Platform+1
    • Cheaper, faster variant.
    • Slightly lower fidelity but still strong for blog illustrations, icons, simple covers.

Pricing-wise (rough ballpark, at time of writing): blog.laozhang.ai+3OpenAI+3OpenAI Platform+3

  • Low-quality 1024×1024 images can be around $0.01 per image.
  • Higher-quality / larger aspect ratios cost more (up to ~0.17 per image).

Your plugin doesn’t decide the price; it just calls the model you configure.


3. Recommended Models for AI Writer Image Generation #

Primary recommendation for most users:

  1. gpt-image-1
    Use this if:
    • You care about visual quality (hero sections, marketing banners).
    • You need consistent style across multiple images.
    • You sometimes need text in the image (titles, banners, “Historact AI” etc.).
    Why it’s good:
    • Successor to DALL·E 3 with improved instruction following. OpenAI Platform+2Zapier+2
    • Handles complex compositions and historical/artistic prompts better.
    • Strong at styles: oil painting, digital art, line-art, photo, etc.

Budget / high-volume recommendation:

  1. gpt-image-1-mini
    Use this if:
    • You generate many images per day (e.g. thumbnails, simple illustrations).
    • You want to keep costs very low.
    Why it’s good:
    • Pricing docs show mini is significantly cheaper than full gpt-image-1. OpenAI Platform+1
    • Quality is sufficient for:
      • Inline blog illustrations.
      • Simple decorative images.
      • Non-critical visuals where perfect quality is not mandatory.

Fallback (older setups):

  1. dall-e-3
    Use only if:
    • Your project or library is still wired to DALL·E 3 and you haven’t migrated yet.
    • gpt-image-1 isn’t available in your account for some reason.
    Note:
    • DALL·E 3 is still strong, but OpenAI now positions GPT Image 1 as its successor and is focusing improvements there. OpenAI Platform+1

4. Models You Should NOT Use for Image Generation #

Important: your image helper must call an image model. Using pure text models for images will not produce PNG/JPEG outputs (they just generate text).

Avoid:

  • Text-only models for image generation:
    • gpt-4.1, gpt-4.1-mini, gpt-4.1-nano, gpt-4o, gpt-3.5-turbo, etc.
    • These can help you write image prompts, but they do not generate images themselves via the image endpoint.
  • Reasoning models (o1, o3, o4-mini):
    • These are for complex reasoning and are priced as such.
    • Even if technically routable via a text endpoint, they’re not needed for simple “turn prompt into an image” workloads.
  • Old or deprecated image models (like dall-e-2):
    • Lower quality, and OpenAI is clearly moving forward with GPT Image 1. OpenAI Platform+1

5. How to Use These Models with AI Writer’s Image Helper #

Your plugin’s image helper is controlled via the AI Writer / media helper settings (behind the class DavixImage\class-davix-image-controller.php you documented earlier).

Depending on how you exposed it in your UI, there are two possibilities:

A. If you have a specific “Image model” field #

  1. Go to WordPress admin → Davix AI Engine → AI Writer.
  2. Scroll to the Image / Media Helper section.
  3. Look for a field like “OpenAI image model” or “Image generation model”.
  4. Set:
    • gpt-image-1 if you want best overall quality, or
    • gpt-image-1-mini if you prioritize cost and speed.
  5. Save changes.

image IMAGE PLACEHOLDER: Screenshot of Davix AI Engine → AI Writer → Media helpers section showing a text field or dropdown labeled “OpenAI Image Model” with gpt-image-1 selected. IMAGE image

Next time you use the image helper in the AI Writer sidebar, it will call that model.

B. If you don’t have a separate image-model field #

Some setups keep things simpler and:

  • Use the same OpenAI project and a fixed image model internally (e.g., hardcoded to gpt-image-1).

In that case:

  • You don’t need to set a separate image model.
  • Just ensure:
    • Your OpenAI API key has access to gpt-image-1.
    • Your billing is configured.

(We already documented how to add the API key in the API Keys category.)


6. Practical Recommendations by Use Case #

Here’s a quick guide:

  • Blog hero / cover images (e.g., for Historact articles):
    • Model: gpt-image-1
    • Reason: strong composition, better text rendering if you want titles or subtle typography in the image.
  • Inline illustrations (supporting images inside the article, simple decorative art):
    • Model: gpt-image-1-mini
    • Reason: cheaper and fast; quality is enough for small inline visuals.
  • Social media variations (Pinterest / X / IG crops):
    • Start with gpt-image-1 for the main asset;
    • Use AI Writer or external editors to crop/resize.
  • High-volume test/staging environments:
    • Model: gpt-image-1-mini
    • Reason: you may generate many experimental images; mini keeps costs down.

image IMAGE PLACEHOLDER: Screenshot collage (or mock) showing three article cards each with a different AI-generated hero image produced via gpt-image-1, representing how the final images look on the site. IMAGE image

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