AI Image Generation Becomes Practical Tool for Brand Photography
AI image generation has quietly crossed a threshold that matters for commerce. What started as novelty art generators can now produce lookbooks, product catalogs, and campaign imagery that passes for professional editorial photography—if you know how to ask.
The gap between generic AI output and usable brand assets comes down to prompt architecture. Most users type something like "nice photo of a shirt on a model" and get stock photography results. The fix isn't better AI; it's better instructions.
Four Layers That Kill the AI Look
Production-ready prompts need four distinct components that most users skip entirely.
Wardrobe precision matters. Don't ask for "a suit." Ask for "a navy unstructured linen blazer, white crew tee, and cream linen trousers." Specific fabric weaves and cuts translate directly into realistic drape and texture in the output.
Environment grounds reality. "A beach" is useless. "A weathered stone jetty with calm grey-blue Mediterranean sea" gives the AI actual textures and a color palette to render.
Camera and film stock eliminate digital gloss. Here's the trick that separates amateur from editorial: specify "Shot on Kodak Portra 400 film, 50mm lens." The AI mimics grain, color science, and depth of field from real photography instead of defaulting to that telltale synthetic smoothness.
Lighting creates dimension. "Strong directional afternoon light" or "warm rim lighting from behind" tells the system exactly where to place highlights and shadows on garments.
The Shot Types Brands Actually Need
A cohesive lookbook requires variety within a consistent aesthetic. Wide shots (full body, 50mm) establish environmental context and leave negative space for text overlays. Three-quarter shots (mid-thigh up, 85mm, shallow depth of field) work for e-commerce and social feeds. Close-ups with macro lenses sell fabric texture—critical for premium positioning.
Back angles reveal silhouette and drape that front-facing shots miss. Duo shots with multiple subjects demonstrate how collection pieces work together across different styling.
Consistency Is the Hard Part
Generating one usable image is straightforward. Generating ten that look like the same photoshoot requires discipline. Use identical physical descriptions across every prompt. Lock your camera, film stock, and lighting language—drop the "Kodak Portra 400" reference once and the AI reverts to glossy defaults, breaking visual continuity.
Advanced tools offer character references and seed locking to maintain facial consistency across angles. Without these features, you're essentially running separate photoshoots that won't cut together.
The technology gives brands access to unlimited locations, gear, and studio time. What it can't provide is the creative direction vocabulary that turns those capabilities into sellable imagery. That's still a human skill—for now.