← Back

Revise or Branch

Post SiMUCOXPEA2nsu3F_UHCM

Generate a group portrait with multiple people interacting naturally.

Generate a group portrait of sisters Ari Elizabeth Holloway and Mari Owen Holloway physically close together and interacting naturally with each other as co‑owners of The Dynamic Duo Tech Center.
The subjects must be grouped closely, not isolated or placed far apart in the scene. Show genuine connection through proximity, shared activity, body language, or eye contact, highlighting their sister bond and collaborative working style.

Match their EXACT physical characteristics:
{fullName}{backgroundStatus}: {traits}.
Hair: Warm light brown hair, Mid-back length, styled as {hairStyling}.
Face: Bright hazel eyes, Fair with warm undertones skin, A small dimple on her right cheek. Skin and makeup: {skinAndMakeup}. Expression: {expression}.
Outfit: Style: Casual tech professional with a clean, minimal edge. Practical enough for a full day on the floor and at the repair bench, but sharp enough for customer-facing sales and co-owner presence.

Colors: Neutrals anchored in black and charcoal with crisp white contrast. The palette stays monochrome so it feels modern, intentional, and easy to pair with tech gear.

Outfit description:

Start with a plain white tee in a soft, midweight cotton jersey. Keep the neckline a classic crew, not too tight, with a smooth, flat knit and no visible logos. The fabric should have a slightly dense, matte finish so it sits clean under layers and doesn’t look sheer under the shop lights.

Layer on a charcoal zip hoodie in a smooth, double-knit cotton blend. Go for a deep charcoal, close to graphite, with a subtle heathered texture instead of a flat solid. The surface should feel soft to the touch but structured enough that the hood and shoulders hold their shape, with clean stitching and minimal seams. Choose a full-length zipper with a low-gloss metal pull, a slim but comfortable fit through the torso, and ribbed cuffs and hem that sit neatly at the wrists and hips so it doesn’t snag while working on devices. Front pockets should be sleek, not bulky, to keep the silhouette streamlined while still giving a place to stash small tools or a phone.

Pair this with black slim-fit jeans in a slightly stretchy denim. The black should be a near-solid wash with only the faintest natural fading at seams, no heavy whiskering or distressing. Opt for a smooth, almost matte finish that reads more polished than rugged. The cut should be slim through the leg without being skinny, with enough flexibility to crouch at a workstation or move between the sales floor and back room comfortably. Clean stitching in black thread keeps the lines minimal and professional.

On the wrist, add a black smartwatch with a matte black case and a smooth black silicone or fluoroelastomer band. The display should default to a simple, high-contrast watch face, preferably with white or light-gray details on a black background to echo the outfit’s palette. The band should be sleek, without heavy texture, so it looks like a deliberate part of the look instead of gym gear. This piece ties the tech specialist role directly into the outfit, signaling both practicality and a love for gadgets.

Keep footwear aligned with the rest of the look: black low-profile sneakers or minimalist leather trainers with a clean design and subtle stitching. The overall effect is a cohesive, age-appropriate outfit that looks put-together for a co-owner and sales manager, but is still comfortable and functional for handling repairs and technical work all day.
Pose: Standing at a slight angle to the counter, weight resting more into the right leg so the hip on that side is subtly anchored, with the left foot a bit forward to give a sense of movement, like you just walked up. Upper body leans in toward the workbench, spine long but not rigid, shoulders dropped and relaxed, neck neutral. Head is slightly tilted toward the device on the counter, gaze directed down and a bit to the side, as if you are mid-explanation to someone just out of frame. The hoodie is unzipped enough that the white tee is clearly visible, and the whole stance reads as efficient, mid-task, and natural rather than posed, like you paused briefly between stations to check something on the bench., hand position: Right hand rests lightly on the edge of the counter or workbench, fingers relaxed and naturally spaced, palm angled down with the wrist straight so the smartwatch is visible in a casual way, not deliberately showcased. Left hand holds a phone or small device close to the work surface, thumb along one side, other fingers supporting the underside. The left elbow stays close to your torso for a compact, focused look. Both hands feel mid-motion, as if you are just about to either set the device down for repair or pivot it slightly to show a detail to a customer beside you. Positions: Co-Owner, Sales Manager & Tech Specialist at The Dynamic Duo Tech Center: Co-running the tech center with her sister Mari, managing sales and customer engagement while handling technical repairs and support.

{fullName}{backgroundStatus}: {traits}.
Hair: Cool light brown hair, Shoulder-blade length, styled as {hairStyling}.
Face: Soft gray-green eyes, Fair with neutral undertones skin, A small dimple on her left cheek. Skin and makeup: {skinAndMakeup}. Expression: {expression}.
Outfit: Tech Center Logo Hoodie in deep charcoal with a subtle, heathered texture, the center logo printed in a muted electric blue and soft white that pops without feeling loud. The inside is brushed fleece for a soft, comfy feel during long repair sessions, and the cuffs and hem are clean rib knit to keep the silhouette neat while you move between workbenches and customer check-ins.

Circuit-print Long Sleeve Tee underneath in a cool graphite base, cut slim but not tight so it sits smoothly under the hoodie. The circuit pattern runs in fine, precise lines of cyan and silver, like a motherboard schematic, concentrated across the chest and upper sleeves so it shows at the collar and when you push the hoodie sleeves up to work on a build.

Black Slim-fit Tech Jeans in a true matte black with a slight stretch for crouching at workstations, fitted through the leg but relaxed enough to stay comfortable all day. The fabric has a smooth, almost brushed finish that resists dust and smudges, with minimal seams and low-profile pockets to keep the look clean and modern while still functional for tools, USBs, and a small notebook.

Minimalist Smartwatch in a sleek black metal with a slim, rectangular face and a smooth silicone band that matches the jeans. The display stays on a simple interface with soft blue accents that tie back to the hoodie logo and tee print, giving a cohesive, quietly futuristic touch that fits a co-owner and creative tech specialist who balances hands-on repairs with design-focused projects.
Pose: Standing behind the front counter, body angled toward an open laptop and a neat spread of small repair tools. Weight settled mostly on one leg with the other foot slightly back, giving a relaxed tilt. Hoodie unzipped to show a circuit-print tee as she leans subtly toward the work surface, shoulders loose. Head turned toward someone just off-frame, eyes sharp and engaged, giving the feel of being mid-explanation and mid-shift, moving easily between bench and counter., hand position: One hand rests lightly on the counter edge, fingers relaxed and slightly spread, smartwatch visible as if just after a gesture. The other hand hovers in motion above a phone on a soft repair mat, thumb and forefinger bracketing one corner of the device while the remaining fingers float just above the surface, steady and practiced, like she is calmly talking through the repair step by step with her sister nearby. Positions: Co-Owner, Creative Developer & Tech Specialist at The Dynamic Duo Tech Center: Co-running the tech center with her sister Ari, providing technical support, repairs, and focusing on creative tech solutions and design work.

Setting:.
Location: {locationContext}.
Time: Midday.
Weather: Midday sits high in the sky, a pale, steady sun filtered through loose tiers of cloud. Light drifts in and out as the clouds slide past, giving the world a slow, gentle flicker; one minute everything is softly muted, the next it sharpens, almost bright enough to make you squint.

It feels like early spring has settled in for real. The air is cool but no longer biting, with that faint softness that hints at warmer weeks ahead. When the sun slips through the breaks in the clouds, you can feel it touch your skin, not with summer’s weight but with a tentative warmth, like it is still remembering how to do its job.

The sky is a patchwork: broad stretches of pale blue stitched together with shifting grays and whites. Every so often a gust brushes through, lifting loose hair and rustling whatever has dared to bloom. Trees are still in the middle of waking up, some branches bare and dark, others tipped with tight buds or a film of green just starting to show. On the ground, small flowers and fresh shoots push through tired soil, flashes of color against winter’s leftovers.

There is a bright clarity to everything, as if the whole day is in-between states: not cold, not warm, not gray, not fully bright. Just that restless, changing light of spring, the kind that makes you want to walk a little slower and pay attention, because the sky might look completely different ten minutes from now.
Mood: Bright, kinetic buzz of focused collaboration, fluorescent lights humming over neatly ordered rows of devices and components. The atmosphere is crisp and efficient, but human, colored by the low thrum of conversations about specs, upgrades, and quick fixes. Midday rush brings a steady flow of customers, a sense of purposeful movement as tickets are opened, hardware is inspected, and solutions are translated into plain language.

There is a subtle undercurrent of pride in competence: screens glow with diagnostic tools, shelves display smart gadgets, and every surface hints at problem solving in progress. The mood balances technical intensity with approachable warmth, as the two sisters glide between front counter and workbench together, shifting from persuasive sales talk to precise technical explanations without missing a beat.

Camera: Slightly low, eye-level plus a small upward tilt, positioned across the counter at a 30, 40° angle to their bodies so we see Ari’s right side more than her left and can also read Mari’s angle behind the counter, as if we are the customer they are explaining something to.
Composition: Rule of thirds: place Ari’s torso and head on the right third of the frame, with Mari close beside or just behind her in the same right-third zone, their proximity clearly showing their sister connection and teamwork. Leave the left side open to show the workbench surface, tools, and glowing screens as context. Keep the device they are focused on along the lower horizontal third, with their shared gaze and body language leading toward it or toward each other as they collaborate. Background should show ordered shelves and a row of devices, softly blurred but still readable as a tech workspace. Use leading lines from the counter edge and bench to guide the eye from foreground (the sisters and the device) into the depth of the shop.
Zoom level: Mid shot, from mid-thigh to just above the head. This keeps the right hip shift and left foot step visible for that sense of motion, while clearly showing hands near the device and their facial expressions as they explain and interact with each other as sisters and co‑owners.

Lighting:.
Background details:.
Image style: Clean, contemporary tech editorial with crisp, clinical precision softened by subtle warmth. Lighting is bright and even, leaning into the cool neutrality of fluorescents while taming harshness with careful exposure and soft contrast. Whites are kept clean and controlled, highlights protected to preserve screen detail and reflective surfaces. Shadows are present but open, maintaining visibility in cable nests, under-counter spaces, and tool drawers.

Color grading favors a balanced cool‑to‑neutral base with selective warmth on skin tones and key points of interaction. Blues and cyans from screens and LEDs are gently saturated to signal technology without feeling neon or aggressive. Grays and silvers of metal and plastic are kept true and consistent, giving a sense of order and reliability. Skin tones stay natural and slightly warm, standing out against cooler backgrounds to foreground human expertise, especially the sister partnership, within a technical environment. Accent colors from branded elements, cables, and gadget casings are lightly boosted to guide the eye through the frame and underscore the buzz of activity.

Clarity and micro‑contrast are finely tuned: details in circuit boards, connectors, and diagnostic interfaces are sharp and legible, but local contrast is moderated in faces and hands to avoid a harsh, clinical feel. Noise reduction is clean and unobtrusive, maintaining a polished, digital aesthetic suitable for a modern service environment.

Composition leans toward structured order with dynamic layering. Leading lines from countertops, shelving, and cable runs draw the viewer into zones of activity. Depth of field is moderately shallow at the front counter to isolate interactions between the two sisters, while wider scenes on the shop floor use deeper focus to show multiple workstations in action. Over‑the‑shoulder angles highlight screens and tools, framing the co‑owners as a calm, competent family team and center of gravity. Repeated shapes such as device stacks, trays, and bins create visual rhythm that reinforces the sense of organized workflow.

Post‑processing workflow emphasizes consistency across the set: uniform white balance tuned slightly cooler for work areas and marginally warmer for customer interactions; subtle vignette, if any, kept very light to avoid moodiness and maintain a bright, open feel; gentle sharpening targeted to edges of devices and text, sparing skin and background gradients. Reflections in glossy screens are selectively reduced, and key UI elements or diagnostic readouts are selectively brightened for clarity. Overall, the style communicates efficiency, precision, reliability, and the close sister partnership guiding the technology.

Color palette:.
Additional information:.
Aesthetic:.
Not everyone needs to face the camera.
Vary body angles (turned away, at angles, side-profile) for natural compositions.
When multiple people are present, the two sisters should often look at each other or at the device they are working on if that is the most natural thing to do given the context; otherwise they should look towards the camera, though it is not necessary for them to look directly at it.
Eyes should follow body direction, look toward the other sister in the photo, or look towards the camera.
Cancel