At home
A cozy home portrait with warm window light and a relaxed morning atmosphere.
Before and after


When a home photo for dating works
A home dating photo signals "I have a calm life and I'm comfortable in it." On Tinder, Bumble and Hinge it often becomes the second or third frame in a gallery: after an energetic shot, it softens the image and shows your "at-home" side.
The style especially helps when all your photos are taken outside or in cafes, and you're missing a cozy, personal frame. Our AI home photo generator takes your selfies and in a couple of minutes builds a portfolio in a bright Scandinavian apartment — a neural photoshoot without the photographer, the cleanup or renting an interior.
What you'll get on your photo
A bright minimalist Scandinavian apartment, morning around ten. A floor-to-ceiling window on the left, warm oak floors, a cream linen sofa with an oat-colored knit throw, a low wooden table with a book in a beige cover and a matte black mug releasing a thin trail of steam. In one corner — a tall monstera in a terracotta pot; on a shelf — a few ceramic vases. No people in the frame, no screens, phones or logos.
You're wearing a loose cream-white waffle long-sleeve with a crew neck, sleeves softly pushed up to mid-forearm. Below — soft oat-colored cotton drawstring pants, straight cut, no prints. Barefoot or in cream knit socks. The hair is gently tousled, "just woke up," with minimal makeup and natural skin glow.
Lighting is soft and diffused, filtering through sheer linen curtains. The pose and expression shift from frame to frame: sitting on the sofa with a mug in hand in one, standing by the window in another, leafing through a book in a third. The quality matches editorial shoots in Kinfolk or Apartamento.
How the home photo generator works
To generate a quality home photo, upload 3–5 front-facing selfies, choose how many shots you want — and wait a couple of minutes. From there the AI generator takes over: it analyzes your facial features, places them in the bright apartment with morning light, and builds the portfolio in three steps.
- Upload up to 5 front-facing selfies in daylight — face fully in frame, no glasses or caps. The clearer your features, the more accurately the AI keeps your likeness.
- Choose how many photos you want in the style — starting from 1 shot. Each home shot costs 20 credits, and the total pack price is calculated automatically.
- Wait a couple of minutes. Generation usually takes 2–4 minutes; during peak hours, up to 10. Once your pack is ready, you'll get a notification and can download any photo at full resolution.
Where to use it
Main spot — Tinder, Hinge and Bumble: a home shot lands well as a second frame after an energetic main photo. It shows everyday life without a pose, and that's a rare angle in dating, where most photos are taken at a bar or on vacation.
Beyond dating, this AI home portrait works confidently on Instagram — for posts about books, mornings or slow living. It also makes a great Telegram avatar. For LinkedIn and resumes the format is too relaxed — there it's better to take the studio portrait.
Selfie tips for the best result
The quality of your input decides the quality of the final frame. Shots in dim light or under a yellow lamp throw off the model: the face "drifts," skin tones turn yellow, and the AI starts inventing features.
- 3–5 front-facing selfies, face in focus and fully in frame.
- Daylight from a window or soft shade outside — no direct sun on your face.
- No dark glasses, caps, masks or thick scarves.
- Different angles: straight-on, a slight head turn, a touch from above and a touch from below.
- A clean or at least calm background — no other people or bright text.
Related styles
If a home shot feels too quiet, take the casual portrait — the tone is livelier, the scene wider. For a cozy interior with coffee and a bit more social energy, try a cafe photo. And if you need a strict minimal background, go with the studio portrait: a clean neural-network headshot on a neutral backdrop.