Why AI product photography works
The goal of product photography is to show potential buyers what they're getting — at its best, in the most appealing context. AI achieves this because it can generate photorealistic environments, lighting and surface textures that look indistinguishable from real studio photography in most contexts.
The cost difference is dramatic. A full studio shoot might cost £500–£2,000 and take a full day. The equivalent variety of AI-generated product images costs a fraction of that and can be produced and revised in hours.
Clean backgrounds and studio shots
The simplest and most useful AI product photography task is background replacement. Photograph your product yourself — even with a phone in good natural light — then use Flux Pixel Edit on AskSary to replace the background with a clean white, grey, or coloured studio backdrop.
The result looks like a professional studio shot. For marketplace listings on Amazon, Etsy, or your own site, this is often all you need. The workflow takes under 5 minutes per product once you're familiar with the tool.
"Replace the background with a clean white studio backdrop with soft, even lighting. Keep the product completely unchanged. Add a subtle drop shadow beneath the product."
Lifestyle and contextual scenes
Lifestyle shots — showing your product in real-world use contexts — typically cost the most to produce traditionally because they require location, props, models and styling. AI can generate these scenes from your product photo.
Upload your product image and use Flux to place it in a realistic environment: a kitchen counter, a coffee table, an outdoor café, a gym bag. The AI integrates the product into the scene with matching lighting and perspective. For non-wearable products, results are excellent. For clothing and worn items, results are improving but still more variable.
Colour and style variants
One of the highest-value AI use cases for e-commerce is colour variant generation. If your product comes in 8 colours but you've only photographed 2, use Flux to generate the other 6 from your existing hero shot. Change a bag from black to tan to navy to red while keeping the shape, lighting, and background identical.
This eliminates the need to physically produce or photograph every variant before you launch — which is particularly valuable for crowdfunding, pre-orders, and testing market demand for colourways before committing to production.
The full production workflow
Photograph the product
Use a phone or camera in good natural light. A plain surface and clean background make everything easier, but aren't essential.
Background replacement
Upload to AskSary Flux Pixel Edit. Replace the background with a clean studio or lifestyle scene.
Generate variants
From your hero shot, generate colour and surface variants using Flux prompts.
Create lifestyle shots
Place the product into 2–3 contextual scenes that match your target customer's environment.
Generate hero imagery with DALL-E
For hero banners and marketing assets, use DALL-E 3 to create polished product-in-context images for social media and ads.
Honest limitations
AI product photography works best for hard goods — bags, shoes, home accessories, tech products, packaged goods. It struggles more with soft goods like folded fabric or complex textures viewed up close. Wearable products photographed on models are harder to edit convincingly than static product shots. For your main hero image, a real photograph still provides the most accurate colour and texture representation — AI is best used to multiply that hero into a range of contexts and variants.
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