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Authentic Portrait Photography

11

132

4

6

Verified:

SafeTensor

Type

LoRA

Stats

132

4

18

Reviews

Published

Aug 18, 2025

Base Model

Flux.1 D

Training

Steps: 10,000
Epochs: 50

Usage Tips

Clip Skip: 2
Strength: 0.8

Hash

AutoV2
944B1D021D

The FLUX.1 [dev] Model is licensed by Black Forest Labs. Inc. under the FLUX.1 [dev] Non-Commercial License. Copyright Black Forest Labs. Inc.

IN NO EVENT SHALL BLACK FOREST LABS, INC. BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH USE OF THIS MODEL.

Authentic Portrait Photography: Definition and Core Features

Authentic portrait photography is a photography category that takes objectively existing individuals in reality as the subject. It captures the subjects’ true states, emotions, and identity traits through the lens, distinct from commercial posed photography or shots of fictional characters. It is commonly seen in documentary photography, portrait shoots, family records, and other scenarios.


Its key characteristics can be summarized in three points:


  1. Authenticity first: It focuses on restoring the subject’s true appearance, avoiding excessive deliberate modification (such as exaggerated filters or distorted retouching). It emphasizes capturing natural expressions (e.g., smiles, contemplation) and daily states to convey a sense of realism.

  2. Emotional and narrative qualities: By combining the subject with their environment (e.g., their workplace, living space) and depicting details (e.g., hand textures, clothing texture), it reveals the subject’s personality or underlying experiences, allowing the image to carry emotion and narrative.

  3. Diverse perspectives: It can adopt a documentary perspective (objective recording, such as street photography) or an interactive perspective (the photographer guides the subject to relax and captures natural interaction moments). Its core is to present "authentic individuals with warmth" through the lens, rather than rigid image displays.