Use a character face reference and target image to create a natural face swap, with optional prompt guidance and cleanup.
The best image results come from specific composition, style, and lighting language. Be explicit about what should be in frame and what should feel dominant.
Best results start with a precise subject, composition, and style direction.
Advanced Face Swap is available in Pixio. Use a character face reference and a target image to place that face into the target, with optional prompt guidance and cleanup.
Advanced Face Swap is available in Pixio. Use a character face reference and a target image to place that face into the target, with optional prompt guidance and cleanup.
| Mode | Input | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Face Swap | Character Image + Target Image | Replace the target face with the character reference |
| Scenario | Best choice |
|---|---|
| Swap a character face into a target image | Advanced Face Swap |
| Remove or replace background | Background Removal |
| Restore photos | Photo Restoration |
| Generate new image | Use a text-to-image model |
Tell the model what should dominate the frame first.
Use lighting language early; it changes everything downstream.
When editing, describe what stays, not just what changes.
References help when continuity matters more than novelty.
A strong image prompt defines the subject, composition, lighting, and finish instead of leaving them implied.
Use precise visual language to control subject, composition, lighting, and style from the start.
Preserve the useful parts of the image while steering the rest with masks, references, or prompt edits.
Bring in reference images or LoRAs when consistency is more important than exploration.
Advanced Face Swap is strongest when the visual brief is specific about framing, style, and what should read first.
Use it for campaign images, product shots, subject consistency, or polished concept work.
When editing, say exactly what changes and what must remain untouched.
Lock the subject, composition, and lighting direction before you chase style nuance.
Use references or edits when the same subject, style, or layout has to survive across versions.
Once the frame works, refine only the weak areas instead of rewriting the whole composition.
Finish strong compositions by scaling them without rebuilding the frame from scratch.
Use editing tools after the initial generation when the composition is right but the details still need polish.