Никита 2 Нахрынов提示Create a single, vertical Polaroid-style portrait by combining the two provided photos into one natural, spontaneous embrace. Follow these detailed instructions precisely:
Scene & Composition
- Arrange both people in a close, natural embrace so they appear to be hugging and looking directly at the camera. Slightly adjust body positions and arm placement as needed to achieve a believable hug; do not alter faces, facial expressions, or head orientation in any way.
- Align scale and perspective so both heads look proportional and on the same focal plane. Avoid stretched or squashed features.
- Final composition should be vertical (portrait orientation) with room for a wide bottom white border typical of Polaroid prints.
Faces & Preservation
- Preserve facial features exactly as in the source images. Do not retouch or reshape faces, eyes, mouths, or noses. Keep all facial expressions, tooth visibility, and facial hair intact.
- Keep eyes and mouths perfectly sharp and free of motion blur. Mask faces completely when applying blur, grain, or other texture effects.
Background & Environment
- Remove original backgrounds from both images and replace with a single seamless white curtain background with soft, natural folds and subtle texture. Add gentle shadows where the curtain naturally falls to avoid flatness.
- Remove or obscure any distant people, furniture, or clutter so only the two subjects remain against the curtain.
Lighting & Flash
- Add a soft, slightly diffused flash centered between the subjects that evenly fills their faces and upper bodies. The flash should suggest a quick, in-camera burst — bright but not clipping highlights or washing out skin tones.
- Add a subtle warm color cast consistent across both subjects to unify the two source images. Preserve natural shadows so the image retains depth.
Motion Blur & Focus
- Apply a controlled, subtle motion blur to hair, shoulders, and outer edges of clothing to convey spontaneous movement. Degree: slightly to moderately visible but not strong. Keep a sharp core around the faces, eyes, and hands by using a masked region that preserves detail.
Film Look & Polaroid Treatment
- Apply warm, vintage Polaroid color grading: mildly boosted mid-contrast, slightly muted highlights, gentle lift in shadows, and a warm tint in midtones.
- Add moderate film grain consistent across the frame and a few minor analog artifacts (very subtle light leak at one edge, slight frame edge imperfections) to enhance authenticity.
- Add a classic white Polaroid frame with a wider bottom border for a caption area. The inner image should have a thin natural shadow to suggest depth inside the frame.
- Add a mild vignette/darkening around the extreme edges of the image to emulate instant-camera optics.
Seamless Blending
- Where the two source images are combined, blend skin tones, lighting, and grain so seams are invisible. Match color temperature and contrast between subjects for a cohesive look.
- Preserve clothing texture and details; do not create visible double limbs or ghosting.
Final Output Requirements
- Keep faces exactly like the originals (no warping). Ensure eyes remain sharp and retain expression.
- Deliver a Polaroid-style final image that appears candid, lively, and unposed — as if the moment were spontaneously captured on an instant camera.
Notes for the editor: prioritize face preservation above all else; subtlely reposition bodies only to achieve a believable embrace and harmonious composition. If any potential issue appears that could affect the realism of faces, stop and flag for review rather than altering features.
Do not generate new faces or alter facial structure. Maintain photographic realism.