Phota Labs opens public studio with Style Me, Unselfie and Make Pro edits
Phota's image model is now publicly available with tools for personal likeness training, multi-person merges and photo cleanup. Creators can direct realistic self-portraits and fix existing shots in one workflow.

TL;DR
- Phota Labs has opened its image model to the public through the launch post, moving a previously limited product into an open Studio workflow.
- Early demos suggest Phota's differentiator is personal likeness: in the overview thread, creators describe getting convincing self-portraits from short prompts, and the photo booth demo shows prompts as simple as a candid rooftop shot or brick-wall headshot.
- The same workflow also handles composite images and guided styling. One demo shows separately trained people and pets merged into a single family-style photo, while the Style Me example uses reference shots to transfer a headshot look.
- Editing is as important as generation here: the editor demo shows “unselfie” and expression fixes on existing photos, and the Make Pro post says the model can relight, recolor, and sometimes re-pose a casual image into a polished portrait.
What’s in the public studio
The public release centers on Phota Studio, which the Studio page presents as the main entry point for generating images and testing prompts. In the launch thread, the core pitch is realism tied to a specific person or pet rather than generic portrait generation.
That shows up in the product’s simplest mode. The photo booth demo describes a plain prompt box, but the examples are unusually short for this category: “candid photo of Justine holding up a drink on a roof in NYC” and “headshot of Justine leaning against a brick wall.” The claim is less about cinematic prompting than about getting a recognizable subject from everyday language.
How the edits change a shot
Phota’s more creator-friendly move is that it keeps generation and retouching in one tool. One workflow post says users can train multiple individuals separately, then combine them in the editor while preserving each subject’s details; the example mixes a person with two pets into a seamless family image.
Style control leans on reference images instead of long prompt recipes. In the Style Me example, a creator feeds in photos from an office shoot to remake that look with their own likeness.
The edit stack then pushes beyond cleanup. According to the editor demo, Phota can “unselfie” a frame or change a neutral face into a smile on an existing photo. The Make Pro post adds a more polished pass that adjusts lighting, color, and sometimes pose while keeping the person and scene consistent, which makes the release feel closer to an AI portrait studio than a standard image generator.