Memorial · For a pet
For the dog still bouncing in your memory.
The cat who slept on every laptop. The dog who knew you before anyone else did. The companion who was always there, until they weren't. Pet memorial is one of the most common ways Lover Snap is used, and pet grief deserves the same care as any other kind of loss.
Reference photos that work well
- ✓ Pick one era of your pet's life — usually adulthood, when their markings and features were most stable
- ✓ Include 3-16 head shots and full-body shots where your pet is clearly visible
- ✓ For pets with distinctive markings (merle, brindle, calico), aim for 10+ photos showing the pattern from multiple angles
- ✓ Avoid heavily filtered Instagram photos — natural lighting trains a better character
- ✓ If you have photos with your pet wearing collars or coats, include both with and without
Scene ideas
- · A walk in your pet's favorite park — golden hour
- · Curled up on the couch where they always slept
- · At the door, waiting (as they always did)
- · A portrait at the kitchen window in soft daylight
- · Outdoor portrait with a Polaroid camera style — printable memorial
- · Sitting on the porch or in the yard they knew
Common questions
- Mechanically, it's the same — train an AI character on reference photos, generate photos in chosen scenes. Emotionally, pet memorial often happens sooner after the loss because pet grief tends to be acute and short-arc. Many users create their first AI pet photo within weeks of losing their animal.
- Yes, with enough reference photos showing the markings from multiple angles. Highly distinctive coats (merle, brindle, calico) need more reference photos than solid-colored animals — aim for 10-16 photos.
- Yes — solo mode generates pet-only portraits beautifully. Many users create dedicated portrait series of their pets at different life stages.
- Pet-as-background photos are weak training material. Look for photos where your pet is clearly visible — head shots, close-ups, pet-focused photos. If you don't have many, even 3-4 pet-focused photos plus several background photos can work.
- Yes — use the Polaroid or 35mm film camera style with golden hour lighting. The combination reads as a nostalgic photo print that feels right framed on a shelf.