Create a high-resolution, photorealistic vertical 4:5 professional studio family portrait using the uploaded/reference family members as the subjects. The uploaded image must be treated as the primary identity reference. Preserve the exact number of people, their family roles, approximate ages, gender presentation, natural facial features, body proportions, skin tone, hair type, hairstyle, face shape, eyes, nose, lips, smile style, jawline, cheek structure, and overall recognizable identity. Do not replace the subjects with generic-looking people.
Identity Preservation — Highest Priority
Keep each person’s face clearly recognizable from the reference image. Preserve the natural facial geometry, expression style, age appearance, and unique features of every subject, including the baby/babies. Do not over-beautify, slim, reshape, age up, age down, change skin tone, change hairstyle too much, or create a different-looking face. The studio transformation should improve lighting, pose, background, and clothing polish, but the people must still look like the same family from the uploaded photo.
Composition & Framing
Place the family group properly centered in the frame with clean, balanced spacing and enough negative space around the subjects so the portrait feels breathable, premium, and professionally composed. Keep the mother seated slightly angled toward the camera on a simple stool or chair, with the youngest baby placed centrally on her lap as the emotional focal point. The father should stand closely behind or beside the mother in a natural protective family pose. All faces must be clearly visible and turned toward the camera.
Family Placement Rules
If there is one baby, place the baby at the center on the seated mother’s lap. If the baby is a boy, present him clearly as a boy with age-appropriate boy styling. If the baby is a girl, present her clearly as a girl with age-appropriate girl styling. If there are two babies/children, place the younger baby on the mother’s lap and the older/larger baby or toddler standing naturally beside the mother, slightly to one side, while keeping the full family composition centered and balanced.
Expression & Pose
Keep expressions soft, warm, happy, and natural, with a real family-love feeling. Faces should look toward the camera with relaxed affection and emotional connection. Avoid exaggerated smiles, stiff posing, forced gestures, or over-directed expressions. The pose should feel like a natural professional family photoshoot, not overly dramatic or artificial.
Outfit & Styling
The woman should be dressed in a full, elegant, modest outfit, such as a full-length or knee-length dress or a properly covered modern or cultural outfit, with a refined family-portrait look. If the family in the uploaded/reference image is already wearing good modern outfits or cultural/traditional outfits, adopt those same outfit styles as the base reference and enhance them slightly so they look more polished, premium, and studio-appropriate while still staying true to the original style. If the reference outfits are too casual, weak, or not visually suitable, enhance and customize them into more coordinated, tasteful, and premium family-photo outfits while keeping them realistic and natural. Do not change clothing so aggressively that the subjects’ identity, age, body type, or family realism gets lost.
Lighting & Background
Use a dark charcoal-gray studio background with a subtle vignette. Add soft, warm front or front-left studio lighting to create gentle highlights on the faces and natural soft shadows. Add a very delicate rim light around the hair, shoulders, and body edges so the subjects separate clearly from the dark background, but keep the rim light subtle and professional, not harsh or glowing.
Camera & Quality
Use a premium 85mm portrait lens look with shallow depth of field, soft bokeh, realistic skin texture, rich natural colors, and crisp studio sharpness. Keep the faces in crisp focus, especially the eyes and facial expressions, while maintaining a soft professional background falloff. The image should look high-resolution, clean, detailed, and professionally retouched without losing natural skin texture.
Avoid
Avoid identity drift, generic faces, changed facial structure, changed age, changed skin tone, different hairstyle, excessive beautification, cartoonish rendering, plastic skin, harsh flash, blurry faces, poor subject separation, cramped framing, unclear baby gender, incorrect number of people, distorted hands, extra fingers, stiff posing, exaggerated smiles, revealing or incomplete clothing on the woman, overly casual mismatched outfits, busy background, or overly strong rim lighting.