Base Image Reference: In the provided composite image (Left: ID Photo, Right: Professional portrait), use the subject and basic structure of the right image (the professional portrait) as the base composition. What to KEEP:The face and identity from the LEFT image (the ID photo) must be used completely and exactly. Crucial Instruction: The facial structure, smile, and likeness on the left must replace the face on the right, but the look direction and head angle of the right portrait (the base) must be maintained. Keep the subject’s black formal suit, white collared shirt, and the specific black tie with geometric patterns from the right image. What to CHANGE:Face Replacement: Carefully modify the head area. Seamlessly composite the likeness and facial details from the LEFT ID photo onto the head structure of the person on the RIGHT, maintaining the rightward gaze.Base Removal: Identify the black, textured object visible in the bottom-left corner of the right image (possibly a podium or chair back). Completely remove it. Replace this area with clean, uninterrupted extensions of the subject's black suit and shirt, showing a natural torso profile without obstruction.Background Transformation: Remove the plain, light-brown textured wall background. Replace it with a "studio photoshoot background." Specifically: use a clean, seamless, professional photographic backdrop with a soft gradient (e.g., varying shades of neutral dark grey). Style & Seamless Integration Constraints: This must be rendered as a photorealistic portrait. The lighting from the original professional portrait (soft, three-point studio lighting) must be retained and applied perfectly to the new face. The skin texture and skin tone of the face from the left image must be adjusted to match the warm, professional lighting of the right-side environment. Ensure zero visible seams, pixel ghosting, or logic errors at the neck/head transition. Adjust the background blur (depth of field) to match the original portrait, keeping the focus sharp on the subject.
Base Image Reference: In the provided composite image (Left: ID Photo, Right: Professional portrait), use the subject and basic structure of the right image (the professional portrait) as the base composition. What to KEEP:The face and identity from the LEFT image (the ID photo) must be used completely and exactly. Crucial Instruction: The facial structure, smile, and likeness on the left must replace the face on the right, but the look direction and head angle of the right portrait (the base) must be maintained. Keep the subject’s black formal suit, white collared shirt, and the specific black tie with geometric patterns from the right image. What to CHANGE:Face Replacement: Carefully modify the head area. Seamlessly composite the likeness and facial details from the LEFT ID photo onto the head structure of the person on the RIGHT, maintaining the rightward gaze.Base Removal: Identify the black, textured object visible in the bottom-left corner of the right image (possibly a podium or chair back). Completely remove it. Replace this area with clean, uninterrupted extensions of the subject's black suit and shirt, showing a natural torso profile without obstruction.Background Transformation: Remove the plain, light-brown textured wall background. Replace it with a "studio photoshoot background." Specifically: use a clean, seamless, professional photographic backdrop with a soft gradient (e.g., varying shades of neutral dark grey). Style & Seamless Integration Constraints: This must be rendered as a photorealistic portrait. The lighting from the original professional portrait (soft, three-point studio lighting) must be retained and applied perfectly to the new face. The skin texture and skin tone of the face from the left image must be adjusted to match the warm, professional lighting of the right-side environment. Ensure zero visible seams, pixel ghosting, or logic errors at the neck/head transition. Adjust the background blur (depth of field) to match the original portrait, keeping the focus sharp on the subject.
Base Image Reference: In the provided composite image (Left: ID Photo, Right: Professional portrait), use the subject and basic structure of the right image (the professional portrait) as the base composition. What to KEEP:The face and identity from the LEFT image (the ID photo) must be used completely and exactly. Crucial Instruction: The facial structure, smile, and likeness on the left must replace the face on the right, but the look direction and head angle of the right portrait (the base) must be maintained. Keep the subject’s black formal suit, white collared shirt, and the specific black tie with geometric patterns from the right image. What to CHANGE:Face Replacement: Carefully modify the head area. Seamlessly composite the likeness and facial details from the LEFT ID photo onto the head structure of the person on the RIGHT, maintaining the rightward gaze.Base Removal: Identify the black, textured object visible in the bottom-left corner of the right image (possibly a podium or chair back). Completely remove it. Replace this area with clean, uninterrupted extensions of the subject's black suit and shirt, showing a natural torso profile without obstruction.Background Transformation: Remove the plain, light-brown textured wall background. Replace it with a "studio photoshoot background." Specifically: use a clean, seamless, professional photographic backdrop with a soft gradient (e.g., varying shades of neutral dark grey). Style & Seamless Integration Constraints: This must be rendered as a photorealistic portrait. The lighting from the original professional portrait (soft, three-point studio lighting) must be retained and applied perfectly to the new face. The skin texture and skin tone of the face from the left image must be adjusted to match the warm, professional lighting of the right-side environment. Ensure zero visible seams, pixel ghosting, or logic errors at the neck/head transition. Adjust the background blur (depth of field) to match the original portrait, keeping the focus sharp on the subject.
Base Image Reference: In the provided composite image (Left: ID Photo, Right: Professional portrait), use the subject and basic structure of the right image (the professional portrait) as the base composition. What to KEEP:The face and identity from the LEFT image (the ID photo) must be used completely and exactly. Crucial Instruction: The facial structure, smile, and likeness on the left must replace the face on the right, but the look direction and head angle of the right portrait (the base) must be maintained. Keep the subject’s black formal suit, white collared shirt, and the specific black tie with geometric patterns from the right image. What to CHANGE:Face Replacement: Carefully modify the head area. Seamlessly composite the likeness and facial details from the LEFT ID photo onto the head structure of the person on the RIGHT, maintaining the rightward gaze.Base Removal: Identify the black, textured object visible in the bottom-left corner of the right image (possibly a podium or chair back). Completely remove it. Replace this area with clean, uninterrupted extensions of the subject's black suit and shirt, showing a natural torso profile without obstruction.Background Transformation: Remove the plain, light-brown textured wall background. Replace it with a "studio photoshoot background." Specifically: use a clean, seamless, professional photographic backdrop with a soft gradient (e.g., varying shades of neutral dark grey). Style & Seamless Integration Constraints: This must be rendered as a photorealistic portrait. The lighting from the original professional portrait (soft, three-point studio lighting) must be retained and applied perfectly to the new face. The skin texture and skin tone of the face from the left image must be adjusted to match the warm, professional lighting of the right-side environment. Ensure zero visible seams, pixel ghosting, or logic errors at the neck/head transition. Adjust the background blur (depth of field) to match the original portrait, keeping the focus sharp on the subject.
Base Image Reference: In the provided composite image (Left: ID Photo, Right: Professional portrait), use the subject and basic structure of the right image (the professional portrait) as the base composition. What to KEEP:The face and identity from the LEFT image (the ID photo) must be used completely and exactly. Crucial Instruction: The facial structure, smile, and likeness on the left must replace the face on the right, but the look direction and head angle of the right portrait (the base) must be maintained. Keep the subject’s black formal suit, white collared shirt, and the specific black tie with geometric patterns from the right image. What to CHANGE:Face Replacement: Carefully modify the head area. Seamlessly composite the likeness and facial details from the LEFT ID photo onto the head structure of the person on the RIGHT, maintaining the rightward gaze.Base Removal: Identify the black, textured object visible in the bottom-left corner of the right image (possibly a podium or chair back). Completely remove it. Replace this area with clean, uninterrupted extensions of the subject's black suit and shirt, showing a natural torso profile without obstruction.Background Transformation: Remove the plain, light-brown textured wall background. Replace it with a "studio photoshoot background." Specifically: use a clean, seamless, professional photographic backdrop with a soft gradient (e.g., varying shades of neutral dark grey). Style & Seamless Integration Constraints: This must be rendered as a photorealistic portrait. The lighting from the original professional portrait (soft, three-point studio lighting) must be retained and applied perfectly to the new face. The skin texture and skin tone of the face from the left image must be adjusted to match the warm, professional lighting of the right-side environment. Ensure zero visible seams, pixel ghosting, or logic errors at the neck/head transition. Adjust the background blur (depth of field) to match the original portrait, keeping the focus sharp on the subject.
Base Image Reference: In the provided composite image (Left: ID Photo, Right: Professional portrait), use the subject and basic structure of the right image (the professional portrait) as the base composition. What to KEEP:The face and identity from the LEFT image (the ID photo) must be used completely and exactly. Crucial Instruction: The facial structure, smile, and likeness on the left must replace the face on the right, but the look direction and head angle of the right portrait (the base) must be maintained. Keep the subject’s black formal suit, white collared shirt, and the specific black tie with geometric patterns from the right image. What to CHANGE:Face Replacement: Carefully modify the head area. Seamlessly composite the likeness and facial details from the LEFT ID photo onto the head structure of the person on the RIGHT, maintaining the rightward gaze.Base Removal: Identify the black, textured object visible in the bottom-left corner of the right image (possibly a podium or chair back). Completely remove it. Replace this area with clean, uninterrupted extensions of the subject's black suit and shirt, showing a natural torso profile without obstruction.Background Transformation: Remove the plain, light-brown textured wall background. Replace it with a "studio photoshoot background." Specifically: use a clean, seamless, professional photographic backdrop with a soft gradient (e.g., varying shades of neutral dark grey). Style & Seamless Integration Constraints: This must be rendered as a photorealistic portrait. The lighting from the original professional portrait (soft, three-point studio lighting) must be retained and applied perfectly to the new face. The skin texture and skin tone of the face from the left image must be adjusted to match the warm, professional lighting of the right-side environment. Ensure zero visible seams, pixel ghosting, or logic errors at the neck/head transition. Adjust the background blur (depth of field) to match the original portrait, keeping the focus sharp on the subject.