Training an Object Model
Object models learn to recognize and accurately recreate specific items—perfect for products, branded items, or unique objects you want to feature in generated images.
Ideal Use Cases
Product photography: Generate your products in any setting
Marketing materials: Create variations for campaigns
E-commerce: Generate lifestyle images with your products
Brand assets: Feature branded items consistently
Image Requirements
You only need a minimum of 1 image to train an object model. We recommend uploading several for better accuracy — the first 3 images have the highest impact on the model's output.
Image Guidelines:
Object clearly visible and in focus
Multiple angles (front, side, top, 3/4)
Clean backgrounds preferred
Consistent lighting across images
High resolution for detail capture
Object fills significant portion of frame
Image order matters — if you're not satisfied with results, try reordering your training images.
What to Include
Good training images:
Full product shots from various angles
Close-up details of distinctive features
Neutral backgrounds (white, gray)
Consistent scale across images
Professional-quality photography
Avoid:
Cluttered backgrounds
Partial views of the object
Heavily edited or filtered images
Mixed products in same training set
Blurry or low-resolution photos
Training Process
Navigate to Models > Create New Model
Select Object as the model type
Upload your training images
Name your object model
Click Start Training
Training takes around 20 seconds — you'll get a notification when it's done
Once trained, you can reuse your model unlimited times.
Using Your Object Model
After training, open the dropdown below the prompt field, select your object model, and it's added to your prompt like a building block. Then describe the scene:
> "[your model] on a wooden table, morning sunlight, lifestyle photography"
> "[your model] being held by a hand, minimalist background"
> "[your model] in an outdoor setting, nature background, product shot"
Tips for Product Photography
Consider the context: Think about where your product would naturally appear
Match lighting styles: Describe lighting that suits your product
Use lifestyle scenarios: Place products in real-world situations
Maintain brand consistency: Keep generated images aligned with your brand
