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Add 1 to 4 photos where both faces are clearly visible. A single well-lit photo is enough to start. Adding multiple angles gives FondPix a stronger face reference for more accurate identity preservation.

Describe any wedding outfit in your own words and see it on your face. Independent styling for each person — no template limits.
Template-based wedding photo tools give you a fixed set of pre-defined looks. Custom styling goes further: you describe the outfit in your own words — fabric, silhouette, color, accessories, cultural garment name — and FondPix generates a portrait of you in exactly that look. Person A and Person B each have their own outfit, hair, and makeup fields. The styling is applied independently to each person in every generated result. Your face, your look, your description — not whatever the nearest preset happens to be.
Very specific. You can name a garment by its cultural or fashion term, describe fabric and color precisely, list specific accessories, and add styling notes for hair and makeup. The more specific and internally consistent your description, the closer the result will be to your vision.
No. A and B styling fields are independent. What you write for Person A is applied only to the person assigned as A. What you write for Person B is applied only to Person B. There is no blending or averaging between the two.
Yes. Name the garment directly — 'red and gold Xiuhe wedding dress with embroidered phoenix pattern', 'ivory Sherwani with gold zardosi embroidery', 'silver Hanbok jeogori with floral embroidery' — and FondPix will attempt to render it. Specific cultural garment names produce significantly better results than vague cultural descriptors.
Upload your photos, write your outfit descriptions, and generate a portrait that looks like you in the look you actually want.
Add 1 to 4 photos where both faces are clearly visible. A single well-lit photo is enough to start. Adding multiple angles gives FondPix a stronger face reference for more accurate identity preservation.
Select custom styling mode and fill in Person A's outfit, hair/makeup, and additional direction — then do the same for Person B. Write in plain language: 'ivory A-line gown, lace bodice, low back, natural hair down' or 'charcoal slim suit, white Oxford shirt, no tie, natural beard trimmed'. The more specific, the better.
FondPix generates portraits with both people in their described looks. Review the output, adjust the description if a detail didn't render as expected, and regenerate. Download the version that best matches your vision in 2K or 4K.
No pre-defined template can hold every couple's specific vision — custom styling is how FondPix handles the rest.
If you can write it down clearly — gown silhouette, suit cut, fabric, color, cultural garment name, accessory detail — FondPix will attempt to render it on your face in a wedding scene.
Person A's outfit, hair, and makeup are completely separate from Person B's. Mismatch intentionally or coordinate precisely — the choice and the description are entirely yours.
No matter how unusual or specific the described outfit, FondPix's identity preservation rule keeps both faces exactly as they appear in the uploaded photos.
Name the garment precisely — Xiuhe, Sherwani, Hanbok, Shiromuku, Agbada, Kebaya — and describe the setting to match. Cultural specificity in the description produces significantly better cultural accuracy in the result.
See how a specific gown, suit color, or outfit combination looks on both of you together before making any financial commitment to a dress, rental, or tailoring order.
Run the same scene with different outfit descriptions to compare directions side by side — classic ivory versus champagne, cathedral versus tea length, matching versus contrasting looks.
Practical guidance on how to describe your wedding look effectively and what to expect.
Be specific about the three most important things: silhouette or cut, color, and fabric or material. Add details that matter to you — 'lace bodice with low V back', 'slim-cut charcoal suit, notch lapel, no pocket square'. One clear direction per description works better than stacking many details at once.
Adjust and regenerate. If the silhouette is right but the color is off, change the color description. If the style is right but a specific detail didn't render, remove that detail from the description and try again. Two or three iterations usually produces the result you want.
Yes, and naming the garment specifically produces much better results than vague descriptions. Write 'red Xiuhe wedding dress with gold phoenix embroidery' instead of 'Chinese traditional wedding outfit'. The specific name anchors the generation to the right garment category.
No template can hold every couple's vision. Custom styling lets you describe it in your own words. Start free with 10 trial credits.