![]() LightTricks publishes a slightly confusing array of iOS apps, offering overlapping functionality. Animate faces with MyHeritage Deep Nostalgia (free trial, web)īring movement effects into drawings with MotionLeap. You can adjust hairstyles, facial hair, structural elements like eyes & nose, and other details, as well as running ‘beauty’ filters. (Don’t ask why she has a wicker basket on her head.)įree 7-day trial, then $39.99/year, iOS + Android: if you’ve got a DALL-E portrait you like, but want to adjust the face with fine control, try using FaceApp instead of re-prompting DALL♾ or trying to inpaint. ![]() Edit faces with FaceApp (free then paid, mobile app) Left: original, from DALL♾. (Don’t like it? Too bad.) Unlimited, free to use: give it a go. There are no options or settings: simply upload, wait 10 seconds, see your result, and download. It also upscales images to double the resolution: 2048 x 2048. It does tend to ‘airbrush’ subjects slightly into the bargain. It can’t work total miracles (it assumes the face structure is ‘correct’) but usually makes things much less unnerving. This one-shot tool tries to rescue facial detail from any portrait, and can turn an unusably ‘weird’ DALL♾ output into something you’d be happy to share. Fix faces fast with ARC Face Restorer (free, desktop web) It’s a free web tool from TenCent. You’ve probably already seen some mind-blowing crossover pieces using professional tools like Photoshop, After Effects and 3D modelling software.īut for this article, let’s focus on free, cheap and simple tools that take your generations to the next level. ![]() DALL♾ is pretty damn amazing, but it doesn’t need to be the only step in your creative workflow. ![]()
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