One garment photo in. A full campaign out.
Traditional product photoshoots cost $5,000 to $15,000 per day — booking a model, hiring a photographer, renting a studio or location, paying for hair and makeup, waiting two weeks for retouched files.
Adstronaut takes a single garment photo — your flat-lay, your mannequin shot, even an amateur on-model photo — and generates editorial-quality on-model imagery in minutes.
Indie streetwear founders launch their PDP imagery the same week their first samples arrive. Shopify sellers add new colorways without booking a reshoot. Social media managers ship ad creative variants in an afternoon instead of waiting on the next quarterly shoot.
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Two workflows. One for catalog, one for social.
E-commerce sellers and social-media-driven brands need very different imagery, so Adstronaut runs two distinct workflows.
The E-commerce workflow gives you full creative control. Pick a model. Pick a pose your PDP needs — full-length, three-quarter, walking, detail close-up. Pick a scene that sets the right context, from a clean studio cyclorama to a real location.
The Lifestyle workflow leans into atmosphere. Editorial Instagram-style scenes designed to live in a feed — golden-hour rooftops, sunset waters, mirror-clean studios, urban moments. The kind of imagery that earns the save and the share, not just the click.
Same garment, two complete creative directions.
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Built-in diversity. Built for global audiences.
Showing your product on a model your customer recognizes used to mean booking three separate shoots in three separate cities — once for each market, each season. Most brands just couldn't afford it, so most customers saw a product on someone who didn't look like them.
The same garment now renders on whichever model fits the audience you're talking to. A North American campaign, a Southeast Asian PDP, a European editorial — all from a single source photo, all in minutes.
Smaller brands run inclusivity at a scale that used to belong only to luxury houses. Larger brands localize creative without rebuilding the shoot.
Every customer finds someone who looks like them on the product page.
Browse the Model Roster
Replaces the $5,000-a-day studio shoot.
The old workflow: book a studio for $800–$2,500 a day, book a model at $500–$3,000 a day, hire a photographer at $1,500–$5,000 a day, add hair, makeup, styling, location fees, retouching, model release forms, scheduling lead time of one to three weeks.
A typical e-commerce shoot for a 10-SKU drop totals $5,000 to $15,000.
Adstronaut replaces the whole production. Under 45 cents per finished image. No model releases. No reshoot lead time.
Best for indie streetwear founders, Shopify store owners, social-first brands, and any team that needs new product imagery faster than the quarterly studio calendar allows.
Read the Cost Breakdown
AI Photoshoots questions, answered straight.
Real questions from indie founders, Shopify store owners, and performance marketers who've replaced studio bookings with virtual shoots.
How realistic does the output look?
Indistinguishable from professional photography to the casual viewer. The AI is fine-tuned on fashion imagery specifically — it understands fabric drape, weave texture, light falloff, and material properties like denim weight or silk sheen. The garment in the output is the same garment from your input, just rendered on a model with consistent lighting. Most customers don't notice; most converted brands stop bothering to disclose.
What models can I choose from?
22 named diverse models — 12 women (Ingrid, Jae, Camille, Amina, Fiona, Hana, Imogen, Alessia, Estelle, Mireya, Natalia, Sofia) and 10 men (Luca, Dae, Rohan, Javier, Jordan, Chad, Marcus, Henrik, Ryan, Stefan). Each model has consistent facial features, body proportions, and skin tone across every pose and scene, so you can reuse the same model across an entire collection for a cohesive lookbook.
What scenes and backgrounds are available?
12 named scenes spanning studio and location moods: Studio Mocha Mousse, Studio Loft, Tropical Greenhouse, Lost Citadel, Central Park, Kashmir Peaks, Obsidian Shore, Retro Diner, Santorini Sunscape, Terracotta Courtyard, Villa Poolside, Neon Bodega. Plus 36 lifestyle-style presets in the Instagram workflow for social-first imagery (reflective cubes, sunset waters, urban elevator, rooftop golden hour, DJ underground, retro diner, and more).
What poses can I choose?
Eight specific poses: Full-Length Front View, Hands on Hip, Dynamic Walk, Side Profile, Detail Close-Up, Over-the-Shoulder Glance, Seated Casual, Leaning. Select multiple poses per generation and Adstronaut renders one image per pose. Five credits per pose.
Can I assemble a full outfit from separate garment photos?
Yes — the E-commerce workflow supports four outfit slots: top, bottom, full-body, footwear. Upload one garment per slot (front and back views each), and the AI assembles the complete outfit on a single model in your chosen pose and scene. Skip the slots you don't need. Adstronaut auto-detects which slot each upload belongs in.
What's the difference between the E-commerce and Lifestyle workflows?
E-commerce gives you precise creative control — exact model, exact pose, exact background, ideal for catalog and PDP imagery where consistency matters. Lifestyle uses 36 curated Instagram-style scene presets — atmospheric, editorial, designed for social feed energy. Many brands use both: E-commerce for the product page, Lifestyle for the ad creative.
How much does a generated image cost?
Five credits per pose in the E-commerce workflow — about $1 per finished image on most plans. A typical 10-pose campaign costs around $10 in credits. Traditional studio photoshoots run $5,000 to $15,000 per day, plus hair, makeup, location, model fees, and retouching. The break-even is roughly your first generated image.
Are the images safe for commercial use? Do I need model releases?
Yes, fully commercial-licensed — use on your Shopify store, Amazon listings, paid ads, social, email campaigns, PR. No model release forms required. No royalty fees. No usage caps. The AI models are synthetic, not real people, so there's no privacy or likeness rights issue to manage.
What kind of garment photo do I need to start?
Any clear shot works — flat-lay on a clean background, mannequin shot, dress-form, or amateur on-model photo. JPG, PNG, or WEBP up to 10MB. The AI auto-detects which input type it's working with and adjusts the rendering pipeline. Higher resolution input produces higher-fidelity output.
Will the garment look exactly like my real product?
Yes — that's the priority. The AI is fine-tuned specifically for fashion garment fidelity. Pattern, color, fabric texture, seam placement, and hardware all transfer to the rendered image. Return rates from brands using AI photoshoots stay in line with brands using traditional photography, because the garment customers receive matches the garment they saw.