A practical guide for “family reunion photo AI”
Multi-generation groups need a composition with enough physical space. A porch, garden, or reunion hall gives the model room to arrange adults and children without crowding faces.
If the portrait includes a person who has died, agree as a family on how the image will be used. A thoughtful recreation can be comforting, but the decision should never surprise close relatives.
Three scenes that fit this idea
Old family home
A familiar porch or garden anchors the image in shared history.
Reunion hall
A wide, simple interior suits a more formal multi-generation lineup.
Summer picnic
A casual outdoor scene works well when clothes and expressions vary.
Choose source photos the model can read
TogetherLens creates a new composition from the people you provide. It does not need matching backgrounds, but it does need clear facial information. Start with the original file when possible rather than a screenshot downloaded from a social network or messaging app.
- Use recent images for children.
- Choose similar crop depth across generations.
- Ask relatives to approve their input portraits.
- Keep each face fully visible and ask every living person for permission.
Generate in three deliberate steps
- Add two to five people.Use one clear portrait for each person and review every crop before continuing.
- Choose one or two vibes.Pick a scene that supports the story instead of competing with the faces.
- Inspect the preview.Check eyes, teeth, hands, clothing, jewelry, and meaningful background details. Trial previews are protected with a watermark.
What to avoid
- Overly tight scenes
- Mixing formal and novelty costumes
- Presenting the image as documentary history
Generated photos are creative images, not documentary evidence. Disclose that the result is AI-generated when context matters, and never use someone’s face to impersonate, embarrass, or mislead.
Questions about this portrait
Can TogetherLens create a multi-generation portrait?
Yes, for groups of up to five people.
Should I label the image as AI-generated?
Yes, particularly when it could be mistaken for a real reunion photograph.