Old identity signal
Skip photos that no longer match your hair, beard, body, or style. Old favorites can pull the generated set away from what someone would actually meet now.
Source photo prep
Lock the camera position, light, grooming, expression, outfit, and backdrop. Then choose the clearest separate photos that look most like the style or output you want. Do not shoot for variety.
Quick setup
The goal is not to take the final profile picture yourself. The goal is to give Vibeflirting enough honest source material to preserve identity while creating more app-ready options. A plain phone photo can be useful if it shows your current face clearly.
Stand near a window or in even open shade. Keep the camera at normal face height, clean the lens, and avoid harsh overhead light. Once the face looks clear, keep that setup fixed while you take several candidates. If you recently changed hair, facial hair, weight, glasses, or style, photograph the current version.
This is different from the broader what photos should I upload checklist. That guide helps you choose from the camera roll. This page is for making a better source set today if the camera roll is weak, old, repetitive, or mostly selfies. For the buyer-specific versions, use the no recent photos guide or the bad-selfie profile fix guide.
Shot list
| Setup part | Lock this | Avoid this |
|---|---|---|
| Camera | Face height, distance, and crop | Moving from close-up to distant or wide |
| Light | One even window or open-shade setup | Mixing harsh indoor, night, and outdoor light |
| Appearance | One current hairstyle, expression, and outfit | Changing grooming, glasses, or clothes |
| Selection | The best 2–4 matched photos | Uploading every candidate for extra variety |
Consistency matters more than coverage. In current Vibeflirting testing, a larger set spread across different locations, outfits, lighting, and backdrops made the styles less predictable. A small matched set produced a higher percentage of usable keepers.
If you are unsure how many images to include, use the source photo count guide. More is not automatically better. Two strong matched photos are more useful than four mixed photos.
Avoid
Skip photos that no longer match your hair, beard, body, or style. Old favorites can pull the generated set away from what someone would actually meet now.
Sunglasses, heavy shadows, hats, masks, and extreme crops make identity preservation harder. A boring clear face photo is more useful than a stylish photo that hides your features.
Very close wide-angle selfies can stretch the face and make the result feel off. Hold the phone farther away or ask someone to take a simple reference shot.
The source set should support believable dating photos, not a fantasy version of your life. Use the AI dating photo mistakes guide if you are unsure where the line is.
Before upload
A good final dating profile still needs different photo roles, but the source-photo training step does not. Keep the inputs closely matched, then let the generated styles create the body, outfit, activity, and setting options. The dating app photo checklist can help you choose those final roles later.
Do not upload the same file twice, but do not manufacture differences either. Separate photos from one short setup are ideal when they preserve the same face, crop, light, grooming, expression, outfit, and background.
Before uploading, compare every candidate with photo one. If a photo introduces a different version of you or a different target style, remove it. Stop at two when the third photo weakens the set.
FAQ
Take several separate photos without changing the setup, then upload only the best 2–4. The candidates can be similar; they should not be duplicate files.
No. Keep outfit, backdrop, light, crop, angle, expression, and current appearance as closely matched as practical. The generated styles provide the output variety later.
Match its approximate face framing, camera height, grooming, expression, and overall look where practical. You are giving the training one target, not recreating the entire final scene.
Yes. Keep the camera near face height and far enough away to avoid wide-angle distortion, then keep that position fixed. A timer or a friend's help can make the framing easier to repeat.
Next step