Step 1: Get the lighting right
Lighting is the most impactful variable in try-on photo quality. Front-lit photos — where the light source is in front of the subject, not behind or to the side — give the AI clear visibility of the body's silhouette, skin tone, and clothing contours. The ideal setup is standing near a window with natural daylight coming from in front of you, or using a ring light. Avoid standing with a bright window behind you, which creates a silhouette and makes the body edges hard to detect.
Avoid harsh shadows on the face and body. Overhead lighting (a ceiling fixture directly above) creates unflattering shadows under the nose, chin, and below the arms, which the AI can misinterpret as body contour artifacts. If the only available light is overhead, supplement with a reflector or a second lamp in front of you to fill in the shadows. In bright sunlight outdoors, face toward the sun (not away from it) for even front-lighting with no shadow gaps.
Step 2: Strike the right pose
The recommended pose is standing upright, facing the camera directly (front view), with arms slightly away from the body — approximately 10–20 degrees out from the torso. This arm spacing is critical for apparel try-ons: arms pressed tightly against the body hide the waistline and make it impossible for the AI to correctly fit the garment to the torso shape. A slight gap between arms and body gives the model the geometry it needs.
Feet should be approximately shoulder-width apart or slightly narrower, and the subject should be looking straight at the camera, not up, down, or to the side. Extreme head tilts and three-quarter body angles produce lower-quality results because the body segmentation model is trained on upright front-view body images. A slight three-quarter angle (15–20 degrees off-center) is acceptable for most apparel categories, but avoid profile (side-on) shots entirely.
Step 3: Background — what works and what helps
Photta's AI works with any background — busy, textured, outdoor scenes, cluttered rooms. The body segmentation model extracts the person from the background before compositing the garment, and it handles complex backgrounds well. Shoppers do not need a clean white studio backdrop and should not be discouraged from uploading photos taken in their living room, kitchen, or outdoors.
That said, a plain single-color background — a white wall, a solid-color door, or a neutral curtain — makes body edge detection marginally cleaner and can improve results for garments with complex silhouettes (full-length gowns, coats with wide lapels). The improvement is subtle for most photos but noticeable for thin garment edges. If your store's try-on guide page includes photo tips, recommend plain backgrounds as a 'nice to have,' not a requirement.
Step 4: Frame correctly for each product category
Category-specific framing dramatically improves result quality. For clothing (tops, dresses, full outfits, coats): photograph the full body from head to just below the feet. The AI needs to see the entire garment zone to composite correctly — cutting off at the knees for a full-length dress will produce a cropped result. For shoes: photograph from mid-thigh to the ground so the full foot and ankle are visible. For rings and bracelets: upload a photo of just the hand and wrist on a flat surface or held up against a neutral background.
For eyewear (glasses and sunglasses): upload a photo of just the face from shoulders up, looking directly at the camera. The AI will composite the eyewear onto the facial region with high accuracy when the face is the primary subject. For necklaces and earrings: a shoulder-up portrait works well. Avoid photos where the target body region is occluded by other objects — a hand covering the neck zone in a necklace try-on, or a sleeve covering the wrist in a bracelet try-on, will degrade result quality significantly.
Step 5: What NOT to do — common photo mistakes
Group photos are the most common mistake. The body segmentation model identifies one person per try-on request — if two or more people are in the frame, the model will select one (usually the most centered) and ignore the others. Always use a solo photo with one person in the frame. Similarly, heavily filtered selfies — Instagram or Snapchat filters that alter body shape, apply face effects, or add virtual overlays — confuse the model because the filter artifacts interfere with body edge detection. Upload unfiltered photos only.
Extreme angles (looking straight down at the camera from above, or shooting from floor level looking up) produce distorted body geometry that the model was not trained on and will produce poor results. Photo crops that cut off key body regions — the shoulders for a jacket try-on, the waist for a dress try-on, the feet for a shoe try-on — will cause the AI to approximate the missing region, producing less accurate results. When in doubt, step back and include more of the body rather than cropping tight.