Branding with AI: Generate Professional Headshots with AI | Ronny Hermosa | Skillshare

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Branding with AI: Generate Professional Headshots with AI

teacher avatar Ronny Hermosa, Your Go-To Canva Guru

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Introduction

      0:28

    • 2.

      Step 1: Training Your AI Model

      10:48

    • 3.

      Step 2: First Look at Your Headshots

      6:19

    • 4.

      Step 3: Creating New AI Headshots

      9:52

    • 5.

      Bonus: Use Photos as References!

      8:04

    • 6.

      Class Project

      1:09

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About This Class

Create Stunning AI Headshots with Canva's New Tool

Ever wished you had a perfect set of headshots, without hiring a photographer or stepping into a studio?
In this class, I’ll guide you through using Canva’s Headshots app, a surprisingly realistic AI tool that even fooled my mom!
Learn how to train your own model, generate high-quality headshots, and fine-tune the results for professional use.

Who This Class is For

  • Entrepreneurs, freelancers, and creatives looking to update their online presence

  • Anyone who wants studio-quality photos without the price tag of a skilled photographer

  • Canva users curious about AI’s potential for personal branding

  • AI enthusiasts willing to explore the new frontier of ultra-realistic, AI-generated self-portraits

What You’ll Learn

  • How to train a personalized AI model on your own photos using the Headshots app in Canva

  • Best practices for uploading and choosing reference images

  • Prompting techniques to get the most flattering and professional results

  • Editing and downloading your headshots for use on social media, websites, and more

Why Take This Class?

  • Discover a new way to present yourself professionally without a camera

  • Learn from real examples, including the surprising results that even tricked my family

  • Get access to my exclusive pro tips and a discount code to try the Headshots app yourself

Practical Outcomes and Takeaways

By the end of this class, you'll walk away with a full set of personalized, professional headshots that you can use across platforms.
You’ll also gain confidence in training AI models and using advanced Canva tools.

Setting Expectations

This isn’t a deep dive into AI theory. It’s a hands-on walkthrough focused on results. We’ll take it step by step, so you can follow along and get great headshots without feeling overwhelmed.
In order to generate your own set of AI generated photos, you'll need to purchase some credits in the Headshots app.

About Your Instructor

I’m Ronny, a Canva educator with years of experience helping creatives like you make the most of design and now also generative AI. I believe learning should be practical, approachable, and a little bit fun, which is exactly what you’ll get in this class.

Let’s Get Started!
Grab your photos, open Canva, and let’s generate some magic together.

Remember, you can get 10% OFF Headshots credits by using the code "TEAMRONDI" at checkout.

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Meet Your Teacher

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Ronny Hermosa

Your Go-To Canva Guru

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Level: Intermediate

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Transcripts

1. Introduction: Generated all these photos of myself with a Cava app that nobody is talking about. I mean, look at them. They look so real that my friends and even my own mother had a hard time figuring out what was going on here. So, in this video, I'll show you everything I know about this app. I'll tell you what it is, how to use it, and give you my best tips so that you too can get the best photos out of it. 2. Step 1: Training Your AI Model: The very first thing you will need to do is to come to Canva and locate the apps button. Okay, so click on Apps and then search for headshots, headshots, like this. And the logo looks like this. It's a camera icon, so click on it, and you should get to this menu right here. So there are two tabs. The first one is generate and the second one is to manage your different headshots that have been taken with the so, you need to start by training a new model. So we can see here the app prompts us to upload some photos. So upload at least ten photos where only your face is visible. Uploading more photos will provide better results. Then if we look at the second field right here, the model name is simply a field for you to name your mother, to give that mother that you're going to train a me, I have decided to train the model on my photos to be fully transparent. I already have a model trained here, and I want to train a new one because since I trained my first model, I talked to my friend at headshot, and he gave me some tips on how to optimize the model, which kind of photos to upload so that you get the best possible results. So I want to try this new way and also show you the steps, obviously. So what else should you know about training a model? Well, first of all, it's not free. Like I was telling you before, it will cost you credits 90 credits to train a new model based on a new set of photos. Included in this AI model training, you will get 40 headshots generated automatically as soon as the model stops, finishes the training. Okay? So once it's trained, it will generate 40 headshots for you, you will receive an email letting you know, Hey, your model is ready, discover your headshot. So we'll go through this. The training takes about an hour. Okay, so it takes a bit of obviously, these credits need to be purchased at some point. So how do you get the credits? You need to click on that little credit right here, Link. So let's open that. There you go. You will get to this page right here where you can choose between three different packs of credits. You have the basic pack that cost $19 that will give you 100 credit. Remember, training the model costs 90 credits that includes 40 heads. So this means that for $19, you can actually get a model trained and receive 50 headshots because every additional headshot will cost you one credit. So when you prompt, you'll get four different images, kind of like magic media, and you can choose any one of these. That generation of four new images will cost you one credit. So since it's 90 credit just for training the model, you still have ten credits to generate photos with if you buy the smaller pack. Now, I told you I partnered with headshots, and I managed to get you 10% off if you use the coupon Team Rondi. So I'll show you how to apply this in a second. Let me just explain the other packages. So you have a $29 package for 200 crates, and a $39 package for 300. Credits. So it really depends on your needs. If you're not sure, maybe start with a small package, you can still buy more credits after all, after you train your first model and you see that it's good, that you like it, that the quality of the photos you get is consistently good, and then you can very easily buy more credits. Continue using the 10% discount with our coupon and just continue using the app. If you don't like it, all you would have lost is about $20. But I do think you will like it because it's pretty so me here, I'm going to buy this $29 pack for 200 credits, get the 200 credits. So it costs you $29. But if you use our promo code, Team Runde, Team Rundi all caps, everything attached, you should get 10% off. Here, that's $2.90, and it will all come down to $26. So the 10% off will be working for everyone. Just make sure to use Team Runde when you check out. Let me come back to Canva and show you some tips that were given to me by headshots on what kind of photos you should use to train the model. So this is going to be the second model I train, and I can show you a side by side comparison after if you want, if you're interested into that. But first, some tips. You should only upload photos that feature you. You should choose a set of photos with a variety of backgrounds that will help the AI learn better. Some recent photos, so nothing that is more than 2-years-old, maybe, include some photos that are taken in different locations, different settings that should also help the AI. Next, avoid exaggerated or silly face expressions. And this is really why I decided to train a second model. Though the first one, I'm very happy. But I trained it on these kinds of photos. You see the photos I usually use on my YouTube snails, and these are exaggerated silly faces or exaggerated expressions on my face. So I noticed that the final output sometimes, not all the time. And most of the time when I generate a new photo out of the four images generated, one is usually better than the other ones, but the fail ones are, I believe, because I uploaded a lot of these silly faces. So this time, I'm going to be using much more neutral faces of mine. More variety of background settings to help the AI really figure it out a bit better. All right. So good lighting for clear and accurate results showing different head positions and angles. The first set that I used, the camera was fixed on a tripod, so I always have kind of the same perspective. So I'm going to correct that with the second model I capture you looking directly at the camera with a mix of utual expressions and subtle smiles. So, great. Now, knowing this, I'm going to show you the sample of photos that I'm going to be using. This should give you a good idea of the batch of images you need to gather in order to train that model the best way possible. There you go, guys. I'm going to quickly go through my different photos. You see? So here, I have photos without a background, like kind of neutral faces. A lot of them are from the same batch, but then I switch it up, okay? So photos of me without the glasses, different backgrounds, kind of different pauses, long hair, short hair, stuff like that. This one, okay, another one. There is another person in the photo. You might recognize her, but let's hope the AI doesn't get confused. Another one here with different lighting, different hair so altogether, this is a set of 30 photos. Head Shot recommends that you upload ten to 20 photos, but they also said that the more the better, the more accurate the model would be, might take slightly longer to train. I'm not sure about that. Also, the quality, the resolution is to be higher than 512 pixel. To me, I try to provide the highest possible resolution. And then last but not least, it is better to upload your photos in PNG format. If you have the choice between PNG and JPEG, go for PNG. But also they said that any format just giving you the best guidelines in order to really optimize the training of that model. Alright. So once you have your set of photos selected, come back to headshots, and you are simply going to start uploading. I'm going to give this model my name. I'm just simply going to call it Ronnie. So let's upload these photos. I'm going to click on the Choose File button right here. This is my set. You see my entire set, so I can go Control A or Command A to select them all open, and this will start loading the photos right here. I have an error message, so I cannot upload all of these photos right here because each of these images is larger than five megabyte. Okay? So I learned something useful here. Your photos that you upload to headshots need to be maximum 5 megabytes large in terms of five size. So what I need to do is to resize all of these photos, and I'm going to show you a tool that I used to do so. You see all of these photos right here. I have very simply a tool is free. It's called Shrink Media. You can resize up to ten photos without logging in. Me, I had slightly more. So I created a free account and haven't paid anything I'm going to show you with the last photo remaining. So that would be this one right here. You see the other ones are smaller than five megabyte. So first, you need to upload your photo into shrink Media, this one right here. Next, it will kind of set some random parameters, some random settings for you, photo quality. And you see the five size 391 kilo. Still have a lot of margin here. So I would like to push this photo quality much higher. I'm going to go 100% in quality and see 75% in size, see if that makes sense. No, still a little bit over. So I'm going to slightly reduce this until I hit my sweet spot, you know, because as Hathot mentioned to us, the larger the higher resolution, the better. So this 90% photo quality, 75% photo dimensioned seems to be giving me some good results. Maybe I can push this slightly more. Let's see. Compress. So by reducing the quality by only 10%. That is fine. So once you're okay with this, you can just click Download. Your photo is going to be downloaded, and now I can upload these two headshots one more time. So I actually downloaded them here. So all of these will be the new ones. You see, they are all under 5 megabytes. So I should be able to upload these. There you go. So now I have all of my photos right here. I should have 30, right? I have named my model. So I can now train that model. And the way you train it is by clicking that purple button right here. It will cost you 90 credits, but you will get 40 headshots. Alright? So let's click here. Let's start generating these headshots and training the model. It will take a while, so I'm going to cut the video and come back to it once I receive that email. 3. Step 2: First Look at Your Headshots: Alright, guys, I got the email and my model is now ready. Now, I haven't yet discovered my 43 headshots. So I'm going to get back to Canva right here, and I got this message. Your headshots are ready. To view them, go to manage. Okay? So let's click on Manage. I need to select the model. So remember, it's this one right here, Ronnie, then I can click on next. And if I head over to headshots right here, I'm going to be able to see my different headshots. Okay, so they are loading. Let's wait a second so we can discover them all. All right. Interesting. So let's click on the first one right here, make it full screen. So we can see what really is going on here. This is pretty accurate. I would say, What do you think? As I'm saying, I'm discovering these with you together with you. And see some of the similar outfits as per the first model I have trained. I like this one. This one is really cool. Different ones right here, different outfits. Some of them, of course, don't look quite like me, but out of these 40 headshots, I can probably rescue a good 15 to 20. All right. So I'm not going to go over each and every one of them individually. I just want to show you some of the good ones and then some of the bad ones without giving you an exhaustive tour of everything. This one doesn't look that much like me in terms of the body. The face could be me, but that body is not my body. What else do we have? We have this one right here. I think this one looks pretty close. I would say head wise. Yeah, the face pretty good. I like that it gave me different kinds of background. So this one could work. Not my favorite one. This one is better in my opinion. Let's go over some of the classy ones right here. So here I have more hair. Let's have one with more hair I like that this mother gave me not so much like maybe like me if I had more like that this model gave me a variety of photos of me with the glasses and without the glasses because I trained the model on a sample on a batch of photo that was both with and without the glasses. This is pretty good. I would say pretty classy. I like the velvety kind of jacket blazer. So this is good. Here are some good ones. For example, this one looks pretty good to me. Let's see. Yeah. This little smile there, not quite right. But this one probably is Let me see. Yeah, this one is pretty cool. This one is very classy as well, kind of like business entrepreneur. This is a really cool photo. I could use that, definitely. Pretty satisfied about the result of this model. But you can judge. Like, let me know what you think of this badge. I have 40 different ones right here. So casual, some more classical, some business, elegant, I would say casual business with these ones right here, more like formal business. I like it. I think the model did a great job understanding my face, my expression, my eyes. I think it's a success. And it is also, in my opinion, better than the previous model that I trained. Show you maybe the previous model so you can understand what I mean. So I'm going to show you Runny black shirt, so the previous model and go straight to my headshots. So you see what I was saying about the mouth being weird. At sometimes, I trained the model on some photos where I had some silly faces. And you see, we can see in that type of photo right here. So, these are the other photos. You see, it's not as good. Like, this one, this guy right here is not me. I mean, not at all when you look at that so the photos you choose are really important for training the model and the model accuracy. Make sure you give it a variety of different photos, different settings, different backgrounds, well lit, no, like, weird facial expressions. Something that is important to understand is what are we actually getting in terms of image resolution, image dimensions when we generate headshots app. Well, I've got some information on this slide right here when we generate headshots with headshots. We receive high resolution 2048 by 2048 photos. All right. So it's the one by one squared aspect ratio, but it is in very high quality. So what I suggest you do, okay, once you have taken a good your 40 free headshots, is that you create a Canva document of these exact dimensions, 2048 by 2048, and you simply open the headshots up and you start organizing your favorite headshot. It's not going to be the whole 40. Some of them are going to be failed. So it really depends on your threshold. Tolerance for how close or not close these photos are based on who the subject is. But for me, I had a pretty low tolerance for the errors because I wanted these photos to really look like me. At least for someone that knows me from my content, think, Okay, that is running. There's no doubt about that. All right. So that's what I did here. In this other document, I didn't choose the one by one aspect ratio, but I did select some of the best photos here, and not all of them are great. Not all of them are ready for me to be published. But I selected some of them because I like the pause or I like the background. So I decided to keep them because they will be useful to me to keep prompting in the future. And we'll see about this a bit later in the video. All right, so that is important to understand what is it that you are getting from the headshots app in terms of photo quality and dimensions. So, guys, we have trained the model, and we have discovered our headshots. Now, the next step would be to generate some new headshots based on the model that we have trained. 4. Step 3: Creating New AI Headshots: Step number three is definitely where we start having some fun with our images. Okay? So now we have trained our model. We have selected our best headshots and organized them in a document. It is now time to start prompting and generating some new headshots based on whatever we'd like. That is the beauty of this app and this model. So we are going to start actually not wild. We are going to start, like, chill and then progressively go to some more eccentric kind of photos of me with all right, let me show you the easy way to generate some new photos. Okay, so here in the headshots hap, I'm going to come back to the Run model button right here, the Run Model tab. If you're not there, if you are on this screen, you will first need to select your model first. So let's go for the latest one I train Ronnie. Click on next, and you will get here. Okay? So from here, you can write a prompt to create a new photo of Ronnie, right? Because it knows you now. The model knows. So here is where things could get tricky, really, because it will come down to prompt engineering and how good your prompts are. Okay? So the reason why I told you, let's start easy, well, is because you have this button right here, the inspire me button, which is going to do the heavy lifting for you. So let's click on it the first time. See as you click on it, it will generate a first prompt. So this will give us a good indication on how to prompt headshots in order to get good results. So let's read the prompt. Generate a professional headshot of male Ronnie at age of 40 with short salt and pepper hair, brown eyes, and wearing glasses in a business casual outfit, such as a buttoned down shirt with rolled up sleeves and tailored trousers with a warm and approachable expression. The background should be a modern co working space. Okay, so here repeated brown eye eyes. I'm not sure why. I could generate this. Actually, I will generate this to show you the input and just know that from here, now every time I will generate a new photo, it will cost me one credit. When I generate a photo, I actually generate four different versions of that photo. I told you the magic media in Canva. Okay, let's generate this photo and see what we get. I'm not going to speed up the video. I want to show you the real speed at which the model works. It says it may take up to a minute. Usually, it's faster than this. So I think it's a good time for me to have a sip of water. I hope you are enjoying this content so far. I hope you are seeing the value in headshots. Me, I was blown away by the quality of the things I could generate. And also the realism of these photos. So yeah, I sincerely hope you are enjoying the content. Alright, my four photos are ready. Let's have a look. Going to click on the first one right here and scale that up. Alright, so this one, I can see not really like me. This face is not me. Too bad because I like the setting. This one is more like me. The second one right here. Okay, let me make this one smaller and this one much bigger. Yes, this is much more like shirt is not too bad. The background is pretty interesting as well. So this is something I could use. Definitely could use this one. The first one, no, it's a big no. Let's see the third one right here. This is a pause that looks familiar to me. Okay, this is pretty realistic as well. Let's move this one out of the way. Yeah, this is pretty realistic. I kind of like this. It looks like a Levi's shirt without being a evi shirt. I'm not sure which one I prefer between the two. This one I have a nicer smile here, I don't smile. And then let's see the fourth one right here. See if it's any good. There you go it right here. It's not that bad, though. Not as good as the other two. Okay, so I have two good photos here. Let me scale them down a little bit, so we can see them side by side. There you go. So now we have these two photos that look pretty good. Between the two, I would say this one is more realistic. So I will get rid of this one and keep this one right here. So, you see, this was the easy way. I just used the inspire me button. Could circle through these prompts and start reading them as much as I want. Every time I will push the try another, try another, try another. There will be more prompts, more or less long, and all of these prompts will work. And they give us a good template to work with. So from here, we could go deeper. Okay? So we could start tweaking these prompts so we can have more control over the output. For example, let's take this new prom right here. Generate a professional headshot of male runnie at age 40 with short salt and pepper hair hair. Why hair hair every time. Brown eyes eyes. It's weird. And wearing glasses, framed from the waist up, allowing more of the body to be visible while still keeping the face as the primary focus. So from the waist up, the background should be a high rise office with a view of city skyline, significantly blurred for focus on the individual. Capture a professional expression that conveys confidence and approachability. Say, frame from the waist up. Ronnie is standing, allowing more of the body to be visible, still keeping the face as the primary focus. Okay, let's get rid of that. Ronnie is standing looking straight at the camera. The background should be a high rise office. Okay, let's get rid of the high rise office. Let's just use a plain background. The background is an orange gradient. The background is a warm orange gradient photographer. The background is a warm orange photography paper background. Ronnie is standing looking straight at the camera in front of a warm orange photography paper backdrop. That sounds good. Okay, so I'm going to delete this. The mood is a relaxed expression that conveys confidence and approachability. Okay, so you see what I've done here. I've used the base prompt from the inspire me prompt and I tweaked it to replace some of the ingredients, some of the elements of that prompt to something that I would like to see. Now, let's generate this prompt and see if it's any good. Alright, so this is ready. I have my four different headshots right here. Some of them are pretty good, like this first one right here. So this one is pretty good. Let me zoom into this one. Yes, I like the orange backdrop. I can definitely use that. What else do I have? This one. Not sure. This one I can see, it's not me. This one looks good, too. So let's have a look, my traditional black T shirt. I have so many photos in that black T shirt. So here I have, again, two good photos. Out of four, this is really good. Like, 50% success with these prompts is a really nice outcome, I believe. So I think you see the power of this that you can really start playing around with the real, like, the real character of you and you can control every single detail of the shot. Now, I've showed you some I would say reasonable photos of you. I'm not going to go into the very crazy, but I want to show you that you can push this much further and more specifically, you can use a specific hack to grab these prompt. Do you see how I struggled writing this prompt right here? It's not easy to write a good prompt for headshots, because you have to take many different things into consideration. And I've asked my friend at headshot, like, what would be a good prompt for using in headshot. And he told me, Okay, so the prompt basically needs to have a few of these ingredients. It needs to have your subject specification. So detailed physical attributes, emotional states, and interaction of the subject with the environment. That would be one, the subject specification. The second part of your prompt should be the environmental context, the environment. So the lighting conditions, weather effects, spatial relationships, all of these things that kind of describe the scene. Then three, you should have some technical parameters. So that could be the camera settings, the lens type, the post processing effect that have been applied to your photo. And then finally, some atmospheric qualities. So the mood description, the temporal indicator, sensory details. So what do we feel when we look at this photo? So that is kind of in a nutshell, what your prompt should be made of, like these four key points. So again, it's not easy to create a prompt like this. But hey, as always, I've got and guys, I'm going to leave a link to this Canva document with the prompt in the project description. Okay? So if you want to get easy access to this prompt, make sure you check the link in the project description. This will lead you directly to this page right here where you can copy my prompt. 5. Bonus: Use Photos as References!: Alright, guys, in this bonus section, I'm going to show you my favorite way of using this app, Okay? Because the inspire me button is nice. Writing your own prompt is complicated. So there is an actual hack to do it in a much easier way. And that technique consists of using an existing photo as a reference, and to use Chat GPT to describe that photo to us and turn it into a prompt structure based on the prompt structure I mentioned before. I'm referring to this prompt structure right here on this slide that I read to you just a few minutes ago. All right. So let me show you how we would do this. The first step would be to find an image that we kind of want to replicate, a pause, a portrait, an attitude that you want to mimic. But with you as the Alright? So me, obviously, I research famous entrepreneur portraits, and very quickly, I stumble upon Steve Jobs, right? And this famous the very famous portrait of Steve Jobs, kind of, like, pulling his chin hair with his black turtanneck iconic sweatshirt. Okay, so let's see if I can reproduce this. I also very much like this one. This photo of Steve Jobs, pointing, like, a very determined look. So let's see what we can do here. And then I will show you some of the other project I've worked on right here, and you will see it's pretty playful, pretty fun, pretty colorful, as well. Alright. So how would that work? Well, first thing first, you need the photo. Okay? So, this one, I grabbed it from Google, but you can grab a photo in the elements tab right here. You can search. I'm going to show you some of my recent searches. So this lady right here, I just typed Astronaut portrait. I think that's what I tapped for finding this photo right here, and I'll show you in a minute how I reproduced it with my model. So you can search the Canva library for some photos by simply using the elements tab to see. So I had Mexican wrestler that I tried as well. Need to go to your photo section right here, see all, and you will have all photos. Okay? So I try one of these, so this set right here. I also show you the result in a minute. Anyways, once you have this, you can go to HAGPT and use this exact prompt right here. Okay? So you can screenshot this slide because this will be your base basically, it goes like this. Analyze the essential components of the photo attached and help me generate a new technical prompt for a character called Runny that would match the attached photo exactly. The prompt for Runny should be no longer than 850 characters and needs to include, then I put the three, four sections of the prompt, subject specification, subject outfit description, environmental context, and technical parameters, and also the atmospheric quality. So there are five parts to this prompt right here. Okay, so copy this prompt, and then head over HGPT. You can start a new conversation. GPT 40 will do. You just need to be able to attach a file. Now, I believe even free users can attach files now. You don't even need to use HAGT. You can use any large language model that allows you to upload a file, a photo. So it would go like this. So first, paste your prompt and then attach the photo. I think it's this one right here. There you go. I so now you run the prompt, and you see Chat GPT is going to come up with the prompt. Okay, runny, middle aged man with a confident yet contemplative expression stands in a striking close up portrait against a seamless white background. His right hand gently rest under his chin, fingers curled slightly, conveying deep thought. Blah, blah, blah. Okay, so you see the image is captured with a 50 millimeter lens f 2.8 for sharpness with monochrome post processing, adding a crisp, yet organic film quality. It is pretty good, though it has been bolded here. So I will ask to remove any formatting from this prompt. Okay, not changing the prompt, I just need it to remove the formatting. Okay, so when I paste that into headshots, I don't have the asterisks that are typical of the bolded text in a prompt. Just going to copy it and come back to my Canva document right here, go to my headshots. I'm going to clear this. I'm going to come to this page and paste my prompt. Now, I see that there is a few things that are mentioned here about the glasses. I don't want these glasses, but I want my glasses. So let's put close up portrait of Ronnie. Okay. Basically, I just get rid of what is not necessary here. Close up portrait of Ronnie with a confident yet contemplative expression, stands intra his intense gaze, framed by his glasses. Okay, I think that's good enough now. Now, I can go ahead and generate this for one credit. Let's see. Alright, guys, my four Steve Jobs photos here, looking at them, I can see immediately that this one is not going to cut it too bad because the position of the hand was pretty good. This one could work. Let's see. This one is not too bad, though, the beautifier went crazy on this one, I think. But it's not too bad. Let's see this other one right here, see if it's a little bit less beautified. I like the second hand here. This one is nice, actually. So you see, I was a to reproduce something pretty close to the Tepjob photos. But yeah, if you're not happy with the result, you can keep tweaking your prompt or you can generate again. Like, you can simply generate again. You will get four new photos, and AI is a little bit like this. So it's a probability game, for sure. You can tweak your prompt or you want. It's still going to be an iteration game. So the more you prompt, obviously, the more chances you get to having the perfect photo. Alright, I think I'm going to leave it here, but before I wrap up this video I want to show you some of the other experiment I have been running. They are right here in my other document. So let me get to this page right here and go full screen so you can see. Remember, I told you I used this reference image from the Canva Library. Okay, so I search for this one in the alva Library. The terms portrait astronaut. And then I used the same technique. I put this into HAT GPT, used the same prompt. I got a description that got me this photo right here. And this one was with the first model I trained, the Ronnie black shirt model, not even the best model. I like this. I think it captured the essence of this photo pretty well. So lost the helmet. Try to get the helmet. I didn't work. This one from this guy right here, generated this one, which I think was pretty good, too. Very realistic, kind of scary. I like the texture of the wrestlers mask. This one was pretty good. Tried it with some other colors. So this one to go from this one to this one, the only thing I changed was the description in the prompt of the colors of the mask. So I just changed the three colors for three different colors. This one, kind of weird, but from this photo right here. So this one more for maybe an album cover or I don't know. Spotify playlist. I tried to replicate this effect of the face kind of pushed against the plastic. Didn't really render that much, but I thought it was interesting and I thought I would show it to you. This one really like this one is cute based on that image and the prompt description that I got from Cha GPT could generate this photo right here. I just changed the description of the glasses for just my original glasses. So this one pretty cool, too. 6. Class Project: Congratulations, guys. You made it to the end of the class. And now it is time for those of you who want to participate in the class project. And you would have guessed it the project consists of creating your very own batch of photos with headshots. So you will need to go through all the steps that I explained in the class. You'll have to first train a new model, discover your existing headshots, and then play around with the prompt box to generate your own headshot. I don't want to see the generic headshots. I want to see some crazy one. All right? So once you do have a few good ones that you are happy with, by all means, post them in the project description. Explain to us, maybe you can add the prompt that you use if you are into this. Give me some context. You can also use the technique I show at the end where you use a reference photo. So in that case, you show me the reference photo and then your photo. That would be a cool way of using the project. I really look forward to discovering your photos. I will jump in there and give you my feedback. Definitely, I always do that. So yeah, get creative and surprise me.