Recreate yourself, anywhere.
AI portrait photography for creators, dating-app profiles, and personal brand content. Editorial studio, on-location scenes, full content batches, all anchored to your real face. The name of the platform is the use case.
Real shoots are slow, expensive, and inflexible.
A real portrait session is a half-day. The photographer, the hair-and-makeup time, the booking lead, the location fee, the post-edit turnaround, the $300 to $700 invoice. For a creator that needs a fresh look every week, for a founder filling a media kit, for someone refreshing a dating-app profile, the economics do not work and the calendar does not work either.
Generic AI portrait tools fail in the opposite direction. They invent a face that looks roughly like you, with the cheekbones wrong, the skin tone off, the eyes set differently, the smile uncanny. The output reads as an avatar of you, not a photograph of you. Friends and strangers can tell at a glance, and the image stops being useful for anything where likeness matters.
Your actual face, in any setting, outfit, and mood you brief.
Upload 4 to 8 reference photos of yourself: front, three-quarter, profile, and at least one close on the face. The model preserves bone structure, skin tone, hair texture and colour, eye colour, and the micro-features that read as you. Likeness is anchored across every output.
Brief the rest: the setting (Paris balcony at golden hour, studio against a stone wall, Tokyo back street at dusk), the outfit (tailored navy suit, oversized cream knit, athleisure, evening gown), the mood (editorial, casual, candid, formal), the composition. A full content batch in an afternoon, all anchored to one reference of you.
Brief, generate, refine.
1. Reference yourself
4 to 8 photos: front, three-quarter, profile, plus a close on the face. The model needs to see your geometry from multiple angles to lock likeness in.
2. Brief the scene
"Three-quarter on a Paris balcony at golden hour, tailored navy suit, soft editorial mood." Or apply a saved Aesthetic, or pick a starting point from the prompts library.
3. Generate & refine
Up to 4K. Iterate until likeness, outfit, and scene all read correctly. Save the winner. The next look in the batch reuses the same Aesthetic.
The use cases that pay it back the first month.
One reference set of you, an unlimited catalogue of looks.
Creator content batches
A month of on-brand posts in one afternoon. Consistent palette, consistent lighting, varied outfits and scenes. The grid stays coherent without running another shoot.
Dating-app refresh
Three or four real-feeling shots that move you out of the algorithm's "low-effort" bucket. Studio portrait, full body in a real setting, hobby scene, candid social.
Professional headshots
LinkedIn, About pages, speaker bios, podcast covers, press kits. Clean studio register, multiple crops, the wardrobe and background you actually want.
Travel & outfit fantasies
Places you have not visited, outfits you have not bought, looks you are considering. A visual mood-board of yourself, decided by you instead of by what is in your closet.
Studio-grade portraits without the studio bill.
For a typical content month (10 to 20 finished images, on-brand register):
| Approach | Time | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Booking a photographer, hair-and-makeup, location | A day to plan, a day to shoot, days to edit | $300–$1,500 a session |
| iPhone selfies and self-timer photos | Constant low-grade effort | Free, but the visual standard caps out fast |
| recreateme.ai (Core) | An afternoon | $30 / month, the full content batch |
The point is not cheaper photos. It is that the visual standard your audience expects is no longer gated by a session calendar and a four-figure invoice.
Full commercial rights to your own face, your own content.
Every frame you generate is yours, for owned channels: site, social, paid sponsorships, speaker pages, press kits, dating-app profiles, podcast covers, About pages, anywhere you would use a real photograph of yourself. No per-image licence, no usage caps.
Nothing of yours is on file unless you choose to share to the public Discover gallery. Your reference photos and generations are private by default. Delete any image or your entire account at any time.
The portrait stack you actually wanted.
8 credits to begin, no card required.
From creators, founders, and people running their own image.
Does it actually look like me?
Yes, when you reference well. Upload 4 to 8 photos of yourself covering a few angles: front, three-quarter, profile, plus a close on the face. The model preserves bone structure, skin tone, hair, and the small details that make a face yours. The settings, the outfits, and the lighting are composed in the brief; you stay anchored to your reference. Bad photo set in equals weak likeness out, so spend a minute on the upload.
Can I put myself in outfits I do not own?
Yes. The brief composes the outfit. Tailored navy suit on a Paris street, oversized cream knit on a windswept beach, evening gown at a candlelit table, athleisure on a hotel rooftop. The model treats the outfit as part of the scene and keeps you anchored. You can also upload an outfit reference (a screenshot from a lookbook, a Pinterest pin) and the model approximates it on you.
Can I put myself in places I have not been?
Yes. Tokyo back streets at dusk, a horse stable in the English countryside, the lobby of a Parisian hotel, a Mediterranean balcony at golden hour, a New York rooftop at blue hour. Brief the place by name or by visual register. The model composes the scene; you remain photographically present, not pasted in.
Is this useful for dating apps?
Yes. The Hinge or Bumble grid rewards three or four good shots: one clean portrait, one full body in a real setting, one in motion or doing something, one social. A photoshoot for that costs $300 to $700 and takes a full day. Generate the equivalent batch in an afternoon: well-lit studio portrait, full-body on a tree-lined street, casual scene at a cafe, one with the hobby or sport you actually do. Use real photos of you as references and the output reads as you, not a stock model.
Is this useful for content creators?
Yes. The pain of a creator grid is consistency: same lighting, same outfit register, same scene grammar across a month of posts. Save reusable Aesthetics (palette, lighting, scene vocabulary) and apply across every reference of yourself. A whole month of on-brand content from one afternoon. The trade-off you avoid is the one most creators hate: running out of shot variety mid-week because real shoots ended.
Can I use these professionally? LinkedIn, About pages, podcast covers?
Yes. A real LinkedIn headshot from a studio costs $200 to $500 and requires a booking, a wardrobe, and a haircut day. Generate the equivalent in 10 minutes against a neutral grey background, in soft window light, in business casual or a suit, at three crops (head and shoulders, three-quarter, environmental). The same workflow handles speaker bios, podcast cover art, conference programs, About page leadership photos.
Can I be in different outfits, scenes, and moods in one batch?
Yes. Brief each shot as its own scene: "editorial portrait against a stone wall, soft window light, charcoal turtleneck" then "three-quarter on a Tokyo back street at dusk, neon ambient, leather jacket" then "hands-on lifestyle scene, kitchen counter, white shirt, golden hour." The model keeps you anchored across the batch; the outfits, the scenes, and the moods are composed independently. A full content batch reads as one person, lots of looks.
Will the platform ever do something weird with my face?
Your references are used only to generate the images you ask for. Nothing of yours goes onto the public Discover feed unless you choose to share. Saved generations live in your private collections; you can delete any image or your entire account at any time. The platform does not train on your face. Full details are in our Privacy Policy.
Can I use the imagery commercially?
Yes. You own every image you generate, with full commercial rights: monetised social, ads, sponsorships, paid content, your own site, podcast and YouTube covers, speaker pages. No per-image licence, no usage caps. Full terms in our Terms of Service.
How is it priced?
8 credits to try, free, usable on any resolution and either engine. Paid plans begin at $15/month (Lite, 75 credits). Core: 150 to 300 credits/month. Max: 500 to 2,000. Annual billing is 25% off. See pricing for the full ladder.
Built across the photography line.
Fine jewelry
Stone fire, prong work, metal reflection, on-hand lifestyle, velvet and silk editorial.
Fragrance
Glass refraction, atmospheric still life, ingredient and note imagery, ritual scenes.
Fashion
On-model editorial, garment drape, fabric macro, lookbook campaign, atelier scenes.
Skincare & apothecary
Texture rendering, ritual flatlays, ingredient close-ups, bathroom-vanity ambient.
Watches
Mechanical detail, lume shots, leather strap macro, wrist scenes, dial light play.
Bags & leather goods
Grain, hardware, atelier scenes, on-body lifestyle, considered hero crops.
Eyewear
Frame architecture, lens reflection, on-face portrait, materials close-up.
Candles & home fragrance
Wick and wax pool, vessel craft, atmospheric still life, lit and unlit states.
Specialty coffee & tea
Brewing ritual, leaf and bean macro, ceremonial scene, café ambient.
Activewear
Movement, fabric tension, on-body lifestyle, studio and outdoor athletic editorial.
Performance apparel
Technical fabric texture, athletic motion, gym and outdoor settings, gear macro.
Drinks & beverages
Bottle and can architecture, pour-and-splash, cocktail ritual, ambient bar and table scenes.
Lighting & decor
Interior atmosphere, fixture detail, object styling, ambient warm-and-cool palettes.
Personal hygiene
Tube and bar packaging, ritual bathroom flatlay, ingredient close-ups, calm clinical aesthetic.
Make-up
Color fidelity swatches, on-face campaign, packaging architecture, palette and tool stills.
Body care
Lotion and balm texture, bathing ritual, on-skin macro, packaging in soft natural light.
Bags
Handle craft, interior detail, on-shoulder lifestyle, leather and canvas texture, hero crops.
Luxury fashion
House-level editorial, atelier craft, runway-grade lighting, hero campaign stills.
Furniture
Material grain, joinery detail, room-scene lifestyle, architectural ambient light.
Home & living
Spatial composition, soft natural light, material warmth, lived-in rooms and considered detail.
Fashion & apparel
On-model editorial, garment drape, fabric texture, lookbook campaign, atelier scenes.
Your face, your content, your terms.
8 credits to begin. Upgrade as the content batch grows.