Practical photo recipes
Start with the moment
you wish you had.
Each guide explains which source portraits work, how to choose a believable scene, what to inspect, and how to
share generated images honestly. TogetherLens supports two to five people.
Family portraits
Put the whole family in one frame.
Use individual portraits to create the family photo that distance, timing, or a missing camera kept you from taking. Read the guide →Missing person
Bring someone into the moment.
TogetherLens composes a new scene around the people you choose. It does not paste a face over an existing body or silently alter an original photograph. Read the guide →Photo combining
Separate camera rolls. One new portrait.
Turn individual selfies into a shared composition without manual masks, layers, or cut-and-paste edges. Read the guide →Long-distance couples
Close the miles for one frame.
Create a shared portrait from two separate camera rolls, then choose a setting that feels like somewhere you would actually go together. Read the guide →Family reunion
Complete the reunion portrait.
Bring relatives from different places or dates into one clearly labeled AI-generated family keepsake. Read the guide →Wedding groups
Give the missing guest a place.
Compose a new wedding-inspired group portrait when travel, timing, or a crowded reception kept everyone out of the same shot. Read the guide →Memorial portraits
Hold one more family moment—with care.
A generated memorial portrait can be meaningful, but consent, context, and family expectations matter as much as visual quality. Read the guide →Christmas portraits
Bring everyone home for the card.
Create a shared winter portrait without coordinating flights, matching schedules, or one perfectly timed camera. Read the guide →Holiday cards
One card. Every household.
Combine separate portraits into a warm seasonal image with enough space for a greeting, address layout, and print-safe crop. Read the guide →Friend groups
Get the whole group out of the chat.
Create a shared portrait when the best friends live in different cities—or simply never remembered to take one together. Read the guide →Missed moments
Recover the group shot—not the history.
Compose a new keepsake inspired by an event while keeping it clear that the generated image is not an original documentary photograph. Read the guide →Birthdays
Put every favorite person by the cake.
Build a playful birthday portrait from separate selfies, with a scene that leaves faces clear and the celebration easy to read. Read the guide →Graduation
Give the graduate the full cheering section.
Compose a new graduation portrait when travel, tickets, or timing kept family members out of the same camera frame. Read the guide →Baby announcements
Picture the family’s next chapter.
Create a celebratory family concept, then add exact names, dates, and announcement wording outside the generated image. Read the guide →Anniversaries
Revisit the feeling, not the old pixels.
Create a polished couple portrait inspired by a shared place, era, or future trip—even when the best source photos were taken separately. Read the guide →Travel groups
Bring every traveler back into frame.
Turn separate vacation portraits into a new destination-inspired group image without pretending it came from the original camera roll. Read the guide →Siblings
One sibling portrait, no schedule required.
Create a current shared portrait when adult siblings live apart—or a playful keepsake inspired by the family albums you grew up with. Read the guide →Generations
Put generations side by side.
Create a family keepsake when distance, mobility, or timing made a shared portrait difficult. Read the guide →Families apart
Different homes. One family portrait.
Collect one clear photo from each household and turn them into a shared portrait without organizing a live photo session. Read the guide →Then and now
Return to the family album—on purpose.
Create a playful portrait inspired by childhood without claiming the generated image is an original family photograph. Read the guide →Grown-up families
A current family photo, finally.
Bring parents and grown children into one present-day portrait without waiting for the next holiday schedule to align. Read the guide →Mother’s Day