Start with photos you both approve
Use clear, natural couple photos where both faces, posture, and expression feel like you.

Generic AI wedding photos have a specific look: faces that could belong to anyone, backgrounds that feel like stock imagery, and a polished emptiness where personal warmth should be. The fix always starts with the source photo. FondPix AI portrait generator builds personality from the couple photo it receives — the more natural, specific, and characteristic your source photo is, the more the output will look like you rather than a template couple.
The troubleshooting checklist below identifies the specific settings — style, scene, lighting, and pose — that are most likely causing generic-looking results.
Generic AI wedding photos have a specific look: faces that could belong to anyone, backgrounds that feel like stock imagery, and a polished emptiness where personal warmth should be. The fix always starts with the source photo. FondPix AI portrait generator builds personality from the couple photo it receives — the more natural, specific, and characteristic your source photo is, the more the output will look like you rather than a template couple.
Start with realistic likeness, then compare it with editorial portrait and romantic garden. The first round should reveal feeling, not create too many similar images.
Look beyond polish. Check whether both people still look like themselves, whether the expression feels relaxed, and whether the image supports the real wedding use.
These directions are chosen to help you make the result feel recognizably like you, not like a polished stranger. Compare how each one changes closeness, formality, layout space, and the way family or guests may receive the image.
Couple decision guide
Couple decision guide
Couple decision guideMove from emotion to decision: upload photos you both like, test a few clear directions, then keep the one that supports the next wedding step.
Use clear, natural couple photos where both faces, posture, and expression feel like you.
Compare realistic likeness, editorial portrait, and romantic garden by warmth, formality, family fit, and design space.
Before downloading, check likeness, hands, wardrobe, crop, text space, and whether the image still feels tender.
FondPix is most valuable before a decision becomes expensive, public, or hard to change.
realistic likeness helps you judge the image from a different angle: warmth, likeness, family fit, and real wedding use.
editorial portrait helps you judge the image from a different angle: warmth, likeness, family fit, and real wedding use.
romantic garden helps you judge the image from a different angle: warmth, likeness, family fit, and real wedding use.
Use FondPix for planning, previews, invitations, album ideas, and briefs. Use real photography for vows, family groups, guest reactions, and one-time ceremony moments.
Look beyond polish. Check whether both people still look like themselves, whether the expression feels relaxed, and whether the image supports the real wedding use.
Regenerate if the faces feel unfamiliar, hands look wrong, wardrobe feels off, text space is missing, or the mood feels too cold for a wedding.
No. Use FondPix for planning, invitations, albums, moodboards, and briefs. Keep vows, family moments, guest reactions, and ceremony memories as real photography.
Short answers for couples who care about emotion, trust, image quality, and real wedding boundaries.
Generic results usually come from one of three sources: an overly filtered or retouched source photo that has already erased individual features; a source photo taken at too great a distance, where faces are not clearly defined; or a style direction that is inherently impersonal — very extreme editorial or heavily atmospheric styles flatten individuality in favor of the aesthetic.
Upload a clearer, more natural source photo. A phone photo taken in good natural light, close enough that both faces fill roughly a third of the frame, with relaxed and natural expressions, almost always produces more personal results than any adjusted prompt or style setting.
Warm, soft-light styles — romantic garden, soft Korean studio, classic portrait — tend to preserve facial character better than high-contrast cinematic or heavily atmospheric styles. The softer the light, the more the portrait reads as a portrait of specific people rather than a mood piece.
Upload clear couple photos and compare realistic likeness, editorial portrait, and romantic garden before you use the image for the wedding.