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A Template is a function that does one job. Product-to-On-Model puts your product on a model. White Background drops a clean packshot background. Ghost Mannequin removes the mannequin. You never describe what you want in words — you pick the Template that already does it.
There is NO PROMPTING. Choosing the right Template is the instruction. A few Templates accept a short optional prompt to nudge the result, but you never have to write one to get an image.

How a Template works

1

Open Studio and pick a Template

Each Template card names the exact job it does. Pick one to open its panel.
2

Upload your inputs

Every Template asks for a product image (required). Some also take an optional reference image for style and scene, a model selection, or a short prompt. Studio shows you which inputs that Template needs.
3

Choose resolution and variations, then Generate

Pick 1K / 2K / 4K and how many variations you want, then hit Generate. Results auto-save to your Library.
New to the flow? Start with the Getting Started guide, and read Product Images so your first generation comes out clean.

Templates by category

Put your product on a person — or take the person back out.

Product-to-On-Model

Turn a flat or packshot product into a photo worn by a real-looking model.

Ghost Mannequin

Remove the mannequin while keeping the fabric drape and silhouette intact.

Model Swap

Keep the product and pose, swap in a different model.

Model Remover

Take the model out of an on-model shot and leave the product alone.

Every Template lists its own inputs

You don’t have to memorize which Template needs what. When you open a Template in Studio, it shows exactly which inputs it requires — product image, optional reference, model selection, or a short prompt. Upload what it asks for and Generate. See Product Images for how to prep each input, and Credits for what each generation costs.