Documentation

Style Presets

Style Presets are professionally designed configurations that define the look, lighting, and mood of your generated portrait. Instead of writing a prompt from scratch, you pick a preset and Morphly handles the rest.

Available categories

Professional

Ideal for LinkedIn profiles, company websites, and business communications.

  • Cinematic Portrait — Dramatic side lighting, shallow depth of field, film-grade color grading
  • Korean ID Photo — Clean soft-box lighting, neutral background, sharp skin detail
  • Studio Clean — White or grey background, even lighting, professional headshot standard

Lifestyle & Outdoor

Natural environments with realistic lighting conditions.

  • Outdoor Lifestyle — Natural daylight, green or urban backgrounds, relaxed pose
  • Golden Hour — Warm sunset tones, soft backlight, editorial feel
  • Urban Street — City background, natural ambient light, casual and modern

Creative & Editorial

Artistic styles for standout social media, portfolio, or personal branding.

  • Editorial Fashion — High-contrast lighting, bold composition, magazine-grade finish
  • Cyberpunk Street — Neon accents, night urban setting, stylized color palette
  • Oil Painting — Textured painterly rendering while preserving face identity
  • Minimalist — Clean composition, muted palette, modern aesthetic

How to use presets

  1. In the Photo Studio, go to the Style panel
  2. Browse presets or use the search field to filter by name
  3. Click a preset to select it — a preview label appears in the checkout summary
  4. Optionally combine with a Custom Prompt for additional control

You can select multiple styles in one session and generate variations of each simultaneously.

Combining presets with custom prompts

Presets set the base style. Your custom prompt adds specifics on top:

Preset: Cinematic Portrait
Custom prompt: wearing a navy blazer, slight smile, indoor library background

Custom prompt text takes high priority in generation — Morphly will weight your description heavily while still applying the preset's lighting and mood.

Style Preset vs. Scene

  • Scene — Sets the environment context (indoor studio, outdoor park, office, etc.)
  • Style Preset — Sets the visual treatment (lighting style, color grade, artistic rendering)

Using both together gives the most controlled results. For example: Scene = "outdoor park" + Style = "Golden Hour" produces a warm, naturally lit outdoor portrait.

Workshop: fine-grained customization

For more advanced control, open the Creative Workshop tab. There you can configure:

  • Theme — Broad visual direction
  • Makeup — Cosmetic look applied to the subject
  • Props — Accessories or objects in the scene
  • Texture — Film grain and saturation levels
  • Storyboard — Multi-shot narrative sequences

Workshop settings combine with both presets and custom prompts.

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