I respectfully disagree and advise the opposite: use exactly the same picture everywhere, on all platforms. It is brand consistency. One can argue that only your face is the brand and the rest should adapt to context. That's fair. But I argue your brand is more than just your face. Your brand is also what you want to be consistent across platforms. For example, I always wear colorful shirts with intricate prints when speaking on stage.
I had a similar experience a couple months ago, but now, it's processes real life pictures.
But I guess Chatgpt plus does it better.
I tried a very similar prompt with ChatGPT's free version and the pictures didn't look like what I uploaded, at least they didn't look like it well enough!
I respectfully disagree and advise the opposite: use exactly the same picture everywhere, on all platforms. It is brand consistency. One can argue that only your face is the brand and the rest should adapt to context. That's fair. But I argue your brand is more than just your face. Your brand is also what you want to be consistent across platforms. For example, I always wear colorful shirts with intricate prints when speaking on stage.
Last time I tried chatgpt refused to process real life pictures of people.
Sometimes it’s acting up. You just have to tell her that it’s you in the image and you grant it your permission or start a new chat.
That must have been sometime ago.
I had a similar experience a couple months ago, but now, it's processes real life pictures.
But I guess Chatgpt plus does it better.
I tried a very similar prompt with ChatGPT's free version and the pictures didn't look like what I uploaded, at least they didn't look like it well enough!