Guidelines

Usage Guidelines

These guidelines are intended to help you get more reliable family-photo results and make better decisions before you save, print, or share a final image.

Start with photos that clearly represent each person

Kinpict works best when each uploaded person is easy to identify. Clear faces, usable light, and natural framing usually matter more than dramatic styling or highly edited source material.

If you are combining separate photos, choose the clearest version of each person you want included. Similar angle and lighting help, but the most important thing is that the subject is visible and easy to read.

  • Use photos with visible faces and natural expression
  • Avoid extreme crops, deep shadows, or heavy motion blur
  • Use the best available resolution instead of screenshots when possible

Keep your request specific and family-focused

The tool is designed around realistic family-photo scenarios. Requests tend to work better when they stay close to that goal instead of trying to force unrelated creative directions into the workflow.

If you know the exact family-photo outcome you want, choose the closest scenario page first and keep the instruction focused on that result.

  • Use the matching scenario page when possible
  • Describe the intended family image clearly and simply
  • Avoid asking for unrelated graphic design or fantasy art outputs

Review every final image before you print or share it

Generated family photos should always be reviewed before they are used for cards, albums, gifts, public sharing, or anything important. Differences in source quality, pose, or perspective can still lead to small issues that need a second look.

If the first result is close but not quite right, it is usually better to improve the source photos or simplify the request than to accept a final image too quickly.

  • Check faces, hands, spacing, and overall realism
  • Review carefully before printing or public posting
  • Try again with clearer photos if the first result feels off

The core rule is simple: start with the clearest photos you have, stay close to the family-photo use case, and review every final image before treating it as finished.