
NEURAL IDENTITY ENGINE
LUMINAFACE.AI
Studio-quality AI portraits that hold up next to optical photography.
LuminaFace is our portrait engine. A generative pipeline tuned for faces, identities and skin, with our Emulse rendering engine layered on top so the result reads as a photograph rather than a render. Upload a handful of selfies. Get a full set of headshots back.
Most AI portrait tools fail in the same ways. Skin goes plastic. Bone structure drifts. Lighting tells you it is fake. LuminaFace solves the lighting first, then the skin, then the rest. The output is meant for places that judge photographs harshly: LinkedIn, casting reels, press kits.
WHAT IT DOES
Identity preservation
The same face across poses, expressions and lighting setups, without drift between generations.
Photographic skin
Pore detail, subsurface scatter and natural micro-imperfection rendered through the Emulse pipeline.
Style controls
Background, wardrobe and lighting style picked from a curated set, or written in plain language.
Privacy-first
Source photos and trained likenesses can be deleted on request. No model retains your face by default.
HOW LUMINAFACE WORKS
Four stages, designed around the face.
- 01
Capture
You upload eight to twenty selfies. The system rejects duplicates and low-information frames.
- 02
Train
A small per-user model is fitted to your likeness on isolated GPU workers. The model is private to your account.
- 03
Generate
A diffusion sampler renders portraits in your chosen style, conditioned on the per-user model and the prompt.
- 04
Render
Emulse passes the image through a film stack to recover photographic skin, halation and color response.
ALREADY LIVE
LuminaFace is live now at luminaface.ai. Visit the product to try it.
THE REST OF THE COLLECTION
SEE IN THE DARK
Impossible Camera
An iOS camera that builds a photograph from the photons most cameras throw away.
OFF-GRID ENCRYPTED MESH
Mesh Whisperer
Encrypted messaging that works when the network does not.
PHYSICAL LIGHT SIMULATION
Emulse
A rendering engine that simulates film as physics, not as a filter.