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AI characters

Photoshoot

Solo vs duo mode: when to use which

Solo mode generates a photo with one AI character; duo mode combines two trained characters in the same scene. Picking the right mode is the single biggest factor in whether your photo looks natural.

Canvas ratio: 1:1, 4:5, 9:16, and when to use each

Lover Snap supports four canvas ratios. Square (1:1) suits Instagram and avatars. Portrait (4:5) is the default for most posed photos. Vertical (9:16) fits Stories and Reels. Wide (3:2) reads as a printable family photograph.

Shooting angle: eye-level, hero, low-angle, and when to break the rules

Eye-level is the natural default for portraits. Hero (slightly below eye) flatters most faces. Low-angle implies power. High-angle implies vulnerability or smallness. Picking the angle deliberately is what makes generated photos read as photographs rather than mugshots.

Lighting: golden hour, soft, harsh, and indoor

Lighting is the second-strongest signal in a photograph after composition. Golden hour is warm and forgiving. Soft is flattering for portraits. Harsh creates drama. Indoor lighting requires you to pick a source — window, lamp, or overhead.

Shooting mode: single shot vs burst (up to 16 at once)

Lover Snap can generate one photo at a time or up to 16 simultaneously. Burst mode is the right default — generating 16 variations and keeping the 2-3 best is faster and produces better results than iterating one at a time.

Camera and lens style: which camera the AI is pretending to be

Lover Snap can mimic the look of specific cameras and lenses — 35mm film, medium format, iPhone, vintage compact. Picking a camera style affects skin tone, color cast, depth of field, and overall feel.

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