Solo vs duo mode: when to use which
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Solo vs duo mode
Lover Snap has two shooting modes: solo (one AI character per photo) and duo (two characters in the same scene). Picking the right mode is the single biggest factor in whether your generated photo looks natural, so it’s worth being deliberate about it.
Solo mode
Solo generates a photo featuring one trained AI character. Best for:
- Professional headshots and LinkedIn-style portraits
- Dating profile photos
- Outfit try-on (you wearing different clothing)
- Fashion or seasonal scene exploration (you on a beach, you in a coffee shop)
- Self-portraits in any setting
You can stack solo generations in a queue of up to 16 at a time and pick the best results.
Duo mode
Duo combines two trained AI characters in a single generated scene. Best for:
- Couples photos (long-distance, deployment, never-met-in-person)
- Family-of-two: parent and adult child, sibling pair
- Owner and pet
- Memorial photos where you want to be in the frame with a loved one who has passed away
- Wedding visualization and proposal scenes
Duo mode requires both characters to be fully trained before you can combine them, which means about 60 minutes of total training time if you’re starting fresh with both.
When duo mode misfires
Duo mode is harder for the AI than solo. Common failure modes and how to avoid them:
- Faces at different scales. If one character was trained mostly on close-ups and the other on full-body shots, the AI struggles to compose a scene where both faces are at consistent distance. Fix: include at least 2-3 full-body shots in every character’s reference set.
- Touching subjects look pasted-together. If your reference photos never show the two people interacting, the AI doesn’t have a model for how they touch — a duo scene with linked arms can look fake. Fix: start with non-touching scenes (sitting at a table, standing in a room) before trying embraces.
- One subject upstaging the other. The AI tends to render the character with more reference photos in sharper detail. Fix: balance the number of reference photos across both characters.
Which to pick when you’re unsure
If you’re not sure, start in solo mode. It costs nothing to try, and you’ll learn what your character looks like before committing to a duo composition. Use duo only after each character has been validated solo.