AI Content Creation: The Best ClawHub Skills for Writing, Images, and Video
A roundup of ClawHub's top content creation skills — humanizer, nano-banana-pro, summarize, and PDF tools — with honest assessments of what each one actually does well and where the limits are.
AI Content Creation: The Best ClawHub Skills for Writing, Images, and Video
The content creation category on ClawHub is crowded. Every skill publisher wants a slice of the "AI writing tool" market, which means there's a lot of noise and a few genuinely useful tools buried inside it.
This roundup cuts through the noise. We tested the content skills that appeared most in community reviews and focused on the ones with clear, specific use cases — not the ones that promise to do everything and do none of it well.
Here's what actually earns its install.
humanizer
The most controversial skill on ClawHub, and also one of the most downloaded. The humanizer skill takes AI-generated text and rewrites it to read more naturally — removing the tell-tale patterns (overuse of "delve into," excessive hedging, robotic sentence rhythm) that make AI output immediately recognizable.
What it does:
- Rewrites AI-generated text to match natural human writing patterns
- Adjusts sentence length variation, clause structure, and word choice
- Removes overused AI phrases and filler language
- Can be tuned to different tones: conversational, professional, academic
- Optionally rewrites to match a sample of your own writing
Install:
/skills install humanizer
Usage example:
You: Humanize this paragraph [pastes AI-written intro]
Agent: Rewritten version:
Before: "In today's rapidly evolving technological landscape, it has
become increasingly important to delve into the multifaceted aspects
of artificial intelligence in order to better understand its profound
implications for modern business practices."
After: "AI is reshaping how businesses operate. The changes are real
and they're moving fast. Here's what that actually means for you."
The result is shorter, clearer, and sounds like something a person would actually write.
Limitation worth knowing: The humanizer is a tool for polishing drafts, not for disguising low-quality content. If the original text has weak arguments or thin substance, humanizing it just makes bad ideas sound more conversational. Quality of thinking still matters.
Also: use this responsibly. There are contexts — academic submission, journalism — where representing AI-written content as your own work is ethically or professionally problematic. Know the difference.
nano-banana-pro
The name doesn't explain what this skill does, but the community reviews do: it's the best Claude Code skill for long-form content drafting with structure control. Despite the playful name, it's a serious tool.
What it does:
- Drafts long-form content (blog posts, reports, proposals, documentation) from an outline or brief
- Maintains consistent tone and style across multi-section documents
- Supports custom style guides and brand voice configuration
- Generates section-by-section with human review checkpoints
- Handles content briefs with SEO targets, word counts, and audience specifications
Install:
/skills install nano-banana-pro
Usage example:
You: Write a 1,200-word product launch blog post. Audience: senior
developers. Tone: direct, technical. Product: our new API rate
limiter. Key points: [list 5 bullet points]
Agent: Draft complete. 1,247 words. Structured in 4 sections:
— Context (why rate limiting matters now)
— What we built (technical specifics)
— How to integrate (code examples)
— What's next
Readability: Grade 10 (appropriate for technical audience)
Estimated read time: 5 minutes
Limitation worth knowing: The output is a strong first draft, not a final version. Expect to edit for 15-20 minutes after. The skill is good at structure and coverage, less good at finding the unexpected insight or memorable turn of phrase that makes content genuinely stand out.
summarize
The summarize skill is deceptively simple. It takes long-form content — documents, articles, reports, transcripts, entire websites — and distills it to the essential points you actually need.
What it does:
- Summarizes documents at multiple length levels (3 sentences, 1 paragraph, 5 bullet points, executive summary)
- Handles PDFs, URLs, plain text, and pasted content
- Extracts specific types of information (action items, decisions, risks, key numbers)
- Compares multiple documents and identifies agreements, conflicts, and gaps
- Generates meeting summaries from transcripts
Install:
/skills install summarize
Usage example:
You: Summarize this 80-page vendor contract. Extract: key obligations,
payment terms, termination conditions, unusual clauses.
Agent: Contract Summary — Acme Software License Agreement
Key obligations:
— You: maintain user count under 500, provide 30-day notice for
renewal cancellation, complete security review annually
— Vendor: 99.5% uptime SLA, 48-hour support response, quarterly
security patches
Payment: $4,200/month, annual commitment, no refunds, auto-renews
Termination: 60-day notice required, data export provided within 30 days
Unusual clauses:
— Section 14.3: Vendor retains right to audit your usage logs
with 5-day notice (uncommon — most agreements require 30 days)
— Section 22.1: Liability cap is $50,000, regardless of contract
value (low relative to annual spend of $50,400)
That's 80 pages condensed to what you actually need to read before signing. The clause flags alone have real dollar value.
Limitation worth knowing: For legally binding documents, use the summary to orient yourself, not to make decisions. An 80-page contract summary doesn't replace legal review. Use it to identify what needs attention, then focus human or legal review on those specific sections.
PDF Skills
ClawHub has two distinct PDF-focused skills worth distinguishing:
pdf-reader
Read, query, and extract from PDF files. Works with scanned documents (OCR included), fillable forms, and standard text PDFs.
/skills install pdf-reader
Usage:
You: Extract all figures and tables from this annual report
Agent: Found 23 figures, 8 tables. Extracting...
Table 3 (Revenue by Region) reproduced in markdown format.
All figures saved as PNG to /output/figures/
pdf-generator
Create PDFs from content Claude Code generates — reports, proposals, formatted documentation. Supports custom templates, headers/footers, and basic layout control.
/skills install pdf-generator
Usage:
You: Generate a PDF proposal from this outline
Agent: Proposal generated: client_proposal_acme_march2026.pdf
Pages: 8 | Layout: professional | Logo: included
Ready for review at /output/proposals/
Limitation worth knowing for both: PDF formatting is the hard part of document work. The generator handles structure well but complex multi-column layouts or pixel-precise design work requires a dedicated design tool. Use it for functional documents, not print-ready marketing materials.
Building a Content Workflow
The skills above combine naturally:
- Draft with
nano-banana-pro(structure and coverage) - Polish with
humanizer(tone and naturalness) - Export with
pdf-generator(professional delivery format)
For incoming content:
- Ingest with
pdf-readerorsummarize(understand quickly) - Extract specific information (action items, key terms, risks)
- Document findings with
pdf-generator(create your own summary artifact)
Content work has always required a combination of speed and quality. These skills shift where your time goes — from mechanical processing to genuine judgment. That's the right tradeoff.