It's sad to see that startups aren't helping push the body positive movement and helping people realise they don't need retouching or blemish removal to look great. Apps like this can only add to peoples insecurities showing them what fake perfection looks like. If Dove, CVS, ASOS and MAC are pushing this movement. Why isn't silicone valley?
Pros:
- Seems like a very functional product that does what it says
Cons:
- Portrays that AI/Retouching is needed to look attractive
Come on, this only tweaks the small things like pimples, yellow teeth etc. Not liking it is like being against wearing concealer. It doesn't let you make faces unrecognizable.
This is a great topic, too, because if people don't like something about themselves that can be corrected, then maybe apps can / need to start to support self-correction. As in, maybe selfie apps need to be married with personal trainer, life coach, and doctor services
Or, we could just let people make up their own minds. Treat them like adults and give them freedom of choice instead of calling for censorship of apps that don't follow our SJW agenda.
As for the Silicon Valley reference, according to Wikipedia, the Prisma team is located in Moscow, but please correct me if I'm wrong. Not all innovation happens in Silicon Valley. You'd be surprised what smart people can do with the right resources. Location is less of an issue these days.
It's sad to see that startups aren't helping push the body positive movement and helping people realise they don't need retouching or blemish removal to look great. Apps like this can only add to peoples insecurities showing them what fake perfection looks like. If Dove, CVS, ASOS and MAC are pushing this movement. Why isn't silicone valley?
@robjbye Hey Rob that's a good point, thank you for your comment! We're not about to push users to make fake pictures of themselves. We aim to help people to take better photos reducing flaws of lighting conditions and limitations of a smartphone camera in general.
@usoltt Totally understandable that lighting and improving DoF is there, however the lead feature is Retouching and Blemish Removal. I would question the use of the lead photo to support this as it implies the woman with slight blemishes needs to remove them to look better.
Hey Product Hunters!
I’m so exited to announce today a new magical product Lensa created by Prisma Labs’ team.
We’re on a path to create an AI that automates photo and video editing routine. Allowing everyone to get amazing professional grade results editing their photos in a matter of seconds. This release is just a first step.
The first version is focused on portrait photos and selfies. It has automated face retouch feature that defines blemishes and removes them without having users to select anything manually. Also, it provides Bokeh effect based on very precise portrait segmentation which allows to run it on a single camera devices with no depth sensors. We’ve implemented camera lens correction and a bunch of other cool tools as well.
Give it a try!
Eagerly waiting for your feedback!
P.S. Android version is coming in the beginning of 2019.
Still new. Happy with the outcomes but more areas to improve, i.e. app is slow to generate photos/ edit and a face get distorted in a good number of photos
Figma
It's sad to see that startups aren't helping push the body positive movement and helping people realise they don't need retouching or blemish removal to look great. Apps like this can only add to peoples insecurities showing them what fake perfection looks like. If Dove, CVS, ASOS and MAC are pushing this movement. Why isn't silicone valley?
Pros:- Seems like a very functional product that does what it says
Cons:- Portrays that AI/Retouching is needed to look attractive
- Goes against the body confident movement
Figma
Lensa AI: Magic Avatars
Figma
Lensa AI: Magic Avatars
Lensa AI: Magic Avatars