Consistent photos of you · consent required
You are the model. Keep looking like you.
Start with photos of yourself, a consenting adult, or a model you hired. Build a personal-brand set, a fashion lookbook, or a month of creator images while keeping the face, hair, age, and build recognizably the same. Fictional and illustrated characters have their own lane here too.
Opens in the EditThisPic editor — free to start, no signup.




A consent-safe capability test
One synthetic adult. New settings and outfits. Still recognizable.
We generated an adult who does not exist, then tested that reference across eleven new scenes. All eleven kept the identity usable; this four-frame strip shows the reference and three of those outputs.




How it works
One reference set, a whole photo library
Bring clear references
Use a front-facing portrait plus a three-quarter or full-body photo when you have one. Only upload an adult who has agreed to this use.
Describe the new shot
Name the setting, framing, pose, and outfit. Say which traits must stay, and change one large variable at a time when identity matters most.
Compare before publishing
Check the face, hairline, marks, age, build, and any locked clothing against your references. Re-run anything that stops reading as the same person.
The person lane
When you need the same adult in more photos
A photo set that still looks like you
Turn a small reference set into workspace, speaking, social, and founder photos without changing who is in them.
Read the guide →Core methodKeep the same person across photos
The practical workflow for identity, new settings, new poses, and honest review.
Read the guide →FashionOne consenting model, new outfits
Build lookbook and seller scenes around the same adult model while the styling changes.
Read the guide →The permission line
Permission is part of the workflow, not fine print
The honest promise is that you can be the model. This is not a way to make an unwilling or famous person appear to do something they never did.
Read the full consent and safety policy →In scope
- Your own adult photos
- An adult who gave informed permission
- An adult model hired for this use
- A fully synthetic adult with no real likeness
Out of scope
- Public figures or celebrities
- Anyone who has not consented
- Minors as a marketed use
- Impersonation or deceptive context
- Fabricated endorsements
- Nudity or suggestive framing
The illustrated lane
Fictional characters still get their own strong workflow
Picture books, comics, tabletop art, and owned mascots need costume and style continuity as much as a photo set needs facial continuity.



Children's book illustration
Keep an owned child, bear, or bunny on-model from spread to spread.
Read the guide →SequentialComics and webtoons
Hold your lead's face, costume, and medium panel to panel.
Read the guide →TabletopD&D character scenes
Carry your original adventurer through the whole campaign.
Read the guide →BrandOwned mascots
Put a mascot you own or license into new campaign scenes.
Read the guide →Straight talk
We say "recognizably consistent" on purpose
We say recognizably consistent because that is what the evidence supports. In our synthetic-adult discovery bench, all eleven scene changes kept the identity usable, including outfit swaps, full-body framing, a side profile, a stage, and a generic product demonstration. It is a strong result from one invented person, not a guarantee for every face, angle, or reference set.
- Held in the person bench: facial identity, curl pattern, skin tone, age, average-athletic build, and the teal outfit whenever it was locked.
- Still needs checking: subtle marks such as freckles, facial geometry at a new angle, hands, and body proportions in distant full-body shots.
- Illustrated evidence: 15 of 18 tested scenes were usable; ambiguous, face-hidden inputs caused the softer results and occasional style drift.
The examples page shows the synthetic reference beside real engine outputs. The public manifest records how the reference was made, every test prompt, and our verdicts. The limitations page explains what this small discovery bench does and does not establish.
Questions, answered plainly
Can I make photos of myself in different outfits and settings?
Yes. That is the primary use case: bring clear adult reference photos of yourself, describe a new shot, and review the result against your face, hair, age, build, and any clothing you asked to keep. The editor is free to start and requires no signup for the first try.
Can I use another person's photo?
Only when that adult has clearly agreed to this use, or when they are a model hired for it. Public figures, celebrities, non-consensual likenesses, minors as a marketed use, impersonation, fabricated endorsements, nudity, and suggestive scenes are out of scope.
Will every result look like the same person?
No tool can honestly promise that. Our small synthetic-adult bench was strong, but a hidden face, a weak crop, a dramatic new angle, or too little reference information can still cause drift. Compare every output to the references and discard or re-run misses.
Does it work for fictional or illustrated characters too?
Yes. Picture-book, comic, tabletop, and mascot workflows remain a full second lane. Use characters you created, own, or are licensed to use; the existing illustrated bench and film-strip examples remain published here.
What happens when I click the button?
It opens the EditThisPic editor, where the image work happens. It is free to start, no signup is needed for the first try, and this guide site never receives your uploaded photos.
Make the next photo look like you
Bring your own adult references—or those of a consenting adult—and describe the new scene. The editing happens in EditThisPic.
Opens in the EditThisPic editor — free to start, no signup.