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Lover Snap

Lighting: golden hour, soft, harsh, and indoor

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Lighting

Lighting is the second-strongest signal in a photograph after composition. Lover Snap interprets named lighting moods plus custom prompts. Picking the right lighting is what makes a generated photo feel like an actual photograph rather than a 3D render.

Golden hour

The hour after sunrise or before sunset. Warm, low-angle sunlight. The most forgiving lighting condition for skin and the most cinematic — and the default for most Lover Snap memorial and family photo scenes.

Best for: outdoor family photos, memorial portraits, couples on a beach, anniversary shoots.

Soft daylight (overcast or shaded)

Diffuse daylight on a cloudy day or in open shade. No harsh shadows, even skin tones.

Best for: portrait-style headshots, dating profile photos, casual family scenes.

Harsh midday sun

Direct, high-angle sunlight. Creates strong shadows under eyes and chin. Dramatic, but uncomfortable on most faces.

Best for: stylized fashion, action sports, scenes that should feel hot or exposed. Avoid for memorial or intimate portraits.

Indoor: window light

Light coming from a single window source. Reads as natural, intimate, and quiet — the lighting of a kitchen at breakfast or a living room in afternoon.

Best for: indoor memorial portraits, family-at-home scenes, candid couples photos.

Indoor: lamp light

Warm tungsten or LED lamp light. Yellow-orange cast. Reads as evening, intimate, domestic.

Best for: family-at-the-table scenes, evening portraits, anniversary photos.

Indoor: candles

Very warm, very dim, deep shadows. Reads as solemn, ceremonial.

Best for: memorial photos involving a vigil, religious or anniversary observance, romantic scenes.

Studio (softbox)

Even, professional lighting with no apparent source.

Best for: LinkedIn headshots, brand photography, passport-style portraits.

For memorial photos

For memorial portraits, the most universally respectful lighting is golden hour outdoors or soft window light indoors. Both feel natural and unforced. Avoid harsh midday sun (uncomfortable) and stark studio lighting (clinical) unless the scene specifically calls for it.

Custom prompts

Combine lighting and angle in custom prompts:

Related questions

Why does golden hour look so good?
Low-angle warm light fills shadows gently and tints skin in flattering yellows and oranges. It also reads as 'the photographer cared' — a strong cue for emotional resonance.
Can I generate night photos?
Yes — specify the light source (street lamp, neon, candles, moonlight). Night scenes are harder for the AI; expect more retries.
What lighting is most respectful for memorial?
Soft daylight by a window for indoor memorial scenes; golden hour or overcast soft for outdoor. Avoid harsh midday sun and stark studio lighting for memorial photos — they can feel clinical.