Here’s a pattern every AI artist knows: you sit down for an hour, explore a concept across 30 or 40 generations, iterate on prompts, swap LoRAs, adjust parameters. Then you switch to something else entirely. Those 30 images belong together—they are a creative session. But nothing in your file system knows that.
Starting today, Numonic does. The new Sessions view in your sidebar groups images by creative session—automatically inferred from temporal proximity and tool context. No folders to create, no tags to apply. And for each session, you can ask an AI curator to reflect on what you made.
Part of our Organise AI-Generated Images
How It Works
Click Sessions in the sidebar (under Explore). Numonic analyzes the creation timestamps of your assets and clusters them into sessions using temporal proximity. If you generated 30 images between 2:00 and 3:15 PM, then nothing until 6:00 PM, that’s two sessions.
Each session card shows:
- Tool badge—which tool (ComfyUI, Midjourney, Stable Diffusion) generated the assets, colour-coded for quick scanning
- Piece count—how many images were created in that session
- Thumbnail grid—the session’s output at a glance, expandable for sessions with many pieces
- “Reflect on this session”—an AI curator generates a specific observation about the creative patterns in that session
Sessions are computed on the fly from your existing data. There’s no migration, no setup, and no changes to your workflow. Import your images however you normally do, and Sessions handles the rest.
Per-Session AI Reflections
This is the part that changes everything. Each session card has a “Reflect on this session” button. Click it, and an AI curator—trained to think like a gallery curator, not a filing assistant—generates a specific observation about that session.
The curator reads the prompts, tools, and titles from that session and produces a 1–2 sentence reflection. Not generic art commentary. Specific observations grounded in what you actually made: “The shift from architectural interiors to close-up botanical studies mid-session suggests a move from controlled spaces to organic forms.”
This is what we mean by “Memory for Imagination.” Your library is not inventory to be managed. It’s a body of creative work to be understood. Sessions with reflections are the first product experience that makes this real.
Why Sessions Matter More Than Folders
Folders reflect how you think you work. Sessions reflect how you actually work. The difference matters when your library grows past a few hundred images.
Consider a typical creative day: you start with character concepts in the morning, switch to environment design after lunch, then circle back to refine one of the morning characters in the evening. A folder structure forces you to choose: do those evening refinements go in the “characters” folder or a “revisions” folder? Sessions don’t care—they show you three clusters of work, each coherent, each preserving the iterative context of what you were exploring.
This becomes critical as agentic creative workflows take hold. When an AI agent can batch-generate hundreds of images from a terminal, temporal clustering is the only organizational principle that scales without human effort.
Try It Now
- Click Sessions in the sidebar (under Explore)
- Browse your session cards—each card is one creative session with a thumbnail grid
- Click “Reflect on this session” on any card to generate a curator observation
- Click any thumbnail to open the asset detail with full metadata
- Sessions with more than six pieces have an expand button to reveal the full set
Sessions requires 50 or more assets in your library to activate. Below that threshold, you’ll see a progress indicator showing how close you are.
Key Takeaways
- Sessions view in the sidebar groups images by creative session—automatically, no tagging required
- Per-session AI reflections generate specific curator observations grounded in your actual prompts and tools
- Tool-aware clustering detects ComfyUI, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion sessions with colour-coded badges
- 50-asset threshold ensures the view has enough material to be meaningful
- Built for scale—designed for libraries of thousands of images, with lazy loading for older sessions
- Read the architecture behind it: Creative Session Clustering
