AI Photography · Fashion & Luxury · 2026
Portfolio · 01

The results
of a photoshoot.
Without the photoshoot.

AI visual production for fashion and luxury brands — built on the same art direction you'd expect from a full campaign.
Campaign
Editorial
Still life
Scroll to begin
Every image is a program. It always was. A camera has always had its rules. The photographer never captured the world — only translated it. Forty years ago Flusser wrote it. The apparatus changed. The craft didn't. Brief. References. Direction. Choice. Photography isn't dead. It's become honest.
— Alberto Maddaloni · Naples, 2026
Manifesto · 01
What stays constant

Coherence,
direction,
speed.

Three forces shape every project. Drag the row sideways to see how each one works on set.

01 / Coherence

Same model. Same wardrobe logic. Same light.

Every generated asset is built on a fixed visual identity. From a single campaign to years of content, the brand DNA stays exactly where you placed it.

02 / Direction

Composition,
casting, grade — editorial.

The system obeys an eye that's seen ten years of sets. Mood boards, references, light diagrams — the way a real campaign is built — drive every frame.

03 / Speed

From brief
to first-look
in days.

Iteration is near-zero cost. Decisions move at the speed of the marketing calendar — not the production one. Reshoots become revisions.

Drag horizontally
02
Series · Sacred Light

Caravaggio,
con una macchina nuova.

An editorial story built on ochre, pomegranate, and the Mediterranean light of a Neapolitan afternoon. Every frame holds the same painterly palette — still life and portrait speak to each other across the series. A direction the camera alone would need three locations and four days to capture.

Interlude

A single frame
can carry
a whole campaign.

Character consistency

One character.
Ten frames. One campaign.

The hardest problem in AI imagery is keeping the same face, same skin, same attitude across a full editorial. This story — shot entirely in AI — holds the model's identity across portrait, tailoring, motion and intimate framing. Same freckles. Same eyes. Same look.

01Character consistency

Portrait

The base reference. Skin, hair, the exact placement of every freckle. Everything that follows pivots from this anchor frame.

Studio

Same face, new posture. Tailoring drops in. The studio light shifts but the identity does not.

Mood

Different garment, different attitude. The system holds the cast — wardrobe and grade move freely around it.

Motion

Body language changes; the face stays. The hardest test for any generative pipeline — and the one that sells the campaign.

Intimate

Closer crop, soft light, more skin. Same eyes, same expression. Continuity across emotional registers.

Bow tie

A new prop and a smile. The character reads instantly — even when the styling pivots from minimal to playful.

Silk

Texture-heavy fabric. The grade absorbs it; the model still belongs to the same campaign world.

Repose

Eyes closed. The face is recognizable without expression — the deepest proof of identity stability.

Detail

A pulled-in crop. Same skin tone, same micro-textures. Continuity at the macro and the micro scale.

Bedroom

Final frame. New room, new light, same person. Ten frames into the story, the cast hasn't slipped once.

Frame 01 / 10
04
On casting

Digital talent,
real presence.

Series · Veil Study

Different skin,
one painted world.

A study in veils — gilded tulle, ivory lace, sculpted shape. Two characters, two materials, one painterly grade. The cast and the fabric shift from frame to frame, but the same studio light and the same burgundy depth keep every portrait inside one painted world.

Editorial · Couture · Painterly portrait
05
Series · Americana

Warm light,
exact grade.

A full denim-and-leather lookbook built on one imaginary desert. Same sunset. Same dust. Same film stock. The location never existed — but the brand identity holds from hero frame to hand detail.

Campaign · Lookbook · Cinematic
“The location never existed.
The light did.”
Production note
Series · Americana 00 / 100
Series · Motel Noir

Technicolor,
reanimated.

A two-character story in a 1950s American motel — same blinds, same diner booth, same palette from morning lipstick to neon evening. The kind of visual world that would take a location scout three months. Here: a week.

Narrative · Cinematic · Character study
“Same booth.
Same neon.
Five days.
Director's note
Series · Motel Noir 00 / 100
Series · Eredi

Stone, sea,
inheritance.

Four heirs on a Mediterranean rampart at golden hour — paisley silk, studded suede, fringed leather, ankle-skimming linen. One coastline, one sun, one fabric vocabulary that ties every look to the next. The cast was fixed before the first frame; the light was the only thing left to chase.

Editorial · Heritage tailoring · Mediterranean
“Same wall.
Same sea.
Four heirs.
Casting note
Series · Eredi 00 / 100
Why AI production

Not cheaper.
Different.

AI photography solves problems traditional shoots physically cannot: fast A/B tests, impossible locations, repeatable casting, campaign assets that evolve with a collection. What stays — and what changes — is the whole point.

Traditional shoot
AI production
Timeline
4–8 weeks · location-dependent · weather-dependent
48 hours for first looks · iteration in hours
Cast
Availability · agency fees · usage rights per territory
Fixed digital talent · unlimited looks · full usage
Location
Travel · permits · seasons · logistics
Any place · any light · any era — on brief
Consistency
Re-cast, re-build set, re-match light for each drop
Same visual DNA for an entire season — guaranteed
What stays
Art direction. Casting eye. Ten years of references. A photographer's taste deciding when to stop.
08
From reference to final frame

Every image
starts from
a reference.

Three shootings, three moodboards, three final sets. Scroll through the references that drove the cast, the styling, the light — and watch them dissolve into the frames the system delivered.

One scene · Three shootings · Scroll to reveal
Restoration sequence
Sequence 01 / 03
Shooting 01

Sospensione

Couture · Veil study
Shooting 01

Sospensione

Couture · Veil study
Shooting 02

Eredi

Editorial · Heritage tailoring
Shooting 02

Eredi

Editorial · Heritage tailoring
Shooting 03

Motel Noir

Narrative · Two characters
Shooting 03

Motel Noir

Narrative · Two characters
09
How a project moves

Not a prompt.
A production.

Every frame goes through the same five stages — the same checkpoints a film crew runs through, compressed into a workflow that delivers in days, not months.

01

Brief & references

We start with the brand book, mood, season, market. Then a moodboard — exactly the kind a film DP or an editor would put in front of a director. Cast, location, palette, light, era — locked before a single frame is generated.

Output
Locked moodboard · cast & wardrobe sheet
Day 1–3
02

Casting & styling

Digital talent is built like real talent: one face, multiple angles, a styling sheet, a full wardrobe matrix. The cast becomes a fixed asset the brand owns and reuses — across the season, the next season, and the territories.

Output
Character file · digital twin · 360° set
Day 3–5
03

Direction & light

Composition, focal length, light direction, grade — designed before generation. The same notes a photographer would write on a call sheet. The system doesn't decide the look. The art direction does.

Output
Shot list · light plan · grade reference
Day 5–7
04

Generation & curation

First looks within 48 hours. Selection happens like in a real edit — proof sheets, marks, kills, second pass. We don't ship the first frame. We ship the right frame.

Output
Selected frames · review rounds
Day 7–10
05

Restoration & delivery

Color, retouch, frame-by-frame quality control. Skin, hands, fabric — corrected at print resolution. Final files match every brand standard a traditional retoucher would meet. No exceptions.

Output
Print-ready masters · campaign deliverables
Day 10–14
10
years on set

in fashion production before AI — the foundation every frame is built on.

14
days to delivery

from brief to print-ready masters, complete with retouch and review.

0
reshoots

because iteration costs hours, not days. Variants are part of the workflow.

1
art director

deciding what stays in and what doesn't — same as in any real production.

Object as portrait

Still life,
at scale.

When the product is the model. Twelve frames, one studio, one grade — the kind of asset library a season needs to live in every banner, every social cut, every page. Same logic, smaller subject.

Get in touch · 12

If you've made it
this far,
let's make something.

Each project starts with a conversation. Tell me about the brand, the season, the brief — I'll come back with a moodboard and a timeline.

Tweaks