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NSFW Photoshoot: How to Quickly Create Not Safe for Work Photoshoots for an Existing Character

In this lesson, we continue working with NSFW content and explore another tool that allows you to quickly and at scale create not safe for work photoshoots for existing models.

Updated over 2 weeks ago

We’re talking about the Photoshoot tool, which was previously used for safe-for-work shoots but, with proper input preparation, works just as well for 18+ scenarios.

The key idea of this lesson is simple:

Photoshoot works the same way for both SFW and NSFW — the difference lies in the references you provide.

Core Logic of the Photoshoot Tool

Photoshoot is a tool that allows you to:

  • upload a character’s face,

  • upload a character’s body,

  • choose the format of the final images,

  • select the photoshoot theme,

  • and generate a cohesive, consistent photoset in a single run.

In an NSFW context, the workflow itself doesn’t change, but strict requirements appear regarding the quality and type of references. Without proper references, results become weak or unpredictable.

Face Preparation: Why Proper Cropping Matters

The first step is uploading a face image.

For NSFW photoshoots, there is an important rule:

  • the face image should be cropped to the chest or at most to the shoulders;

  • full-body face images should not be used.

This is necessary to ensure that:

  • head-to-body proportions align correctly;

  • the face does not “float” in generated images;

  • the neck and upper torso look natural.

If the face is cropped too tightly or includes the full body, it becomes harder for the model to correctly place the face onto the body in new scenes.

Body Preparation: The Key Element of NSFW Photoshoot

The most important difference between NSFW and safe-for-work Photoshoot is the body reference.

For high-quality results:

  • the body must be uploaded fully;

  • breasts, intimate area, and overall proportions must be visible;

  • ideally, the body should be completely nude.

Why this is critical:

  • Photoshoot does not invent the body from scratch;

  • it relies on the body reference;

  • if the body is covered by clothing, lingerie, straps, or loose garments, the model starts guessing — and consistency is lost.

The examples show that the best results come from a clean, fully exposed body reference. Light fabrics or semi-transparent elements are acceptable and shown intentionally to demonstrate that generation is still possible, but the ideal option remains clear.

Basic Photoshoot Settings

After uploading the face and body, we move to standard settings:

  • select the aspect ratio;

  • set the resolution in pixels;

  • specify the character’s gender;

  • choose the number of images.

These parameters work exactly the same as in safe-for-work photoshoots.

Categories and 18+ Themes

Next comes the most important part — choosing photoshoot themes.

The tool offers around 18 categories, including:

  • neutral or near-SFW options (for example, lingerie);

  • seasonal themes (New Year, Christmas);

  • and categories explicitly marked as 18+.

It’s important to understand:

categories labeled as 18+ are designed for explicit content and are suitable for NSFW photoshoots.

The lesson demonstrates several such categories:

  • BDSM — featuring leather, straps, and characteristic accessories;

  • Essential Touch — softer, boudoir-style scenes;

  • Lingerie — not formally 18+, but with strong poses and erotic undertones.

You can select one or multiple categories and define how many images you want from each.

Generation Results: Consistency as the Main Advantage

The final examples clearly show that Photoshoot:

  • preserves body consistency;

  • correctly transfers the face;

  • maintains breast size, waist proportions, and intimate anatomy;

  • avoids appearance “drift” from image to image.

This is especially important for NSFW content, where any anatomical inconsistency is immediately noticeable.

The resulting photosets look like a single professional shoot, not a collection of random generations.

Refining the Result: What to Do If It’s “Almost Perfect”

If a final image:

  • works well in terms of pose,

  • fits the scene,

  • but has small details you want to refine,

you don’t stop there.

The lesson reminds you that such images can be:

  • sent to Image-to-Image,

  • refined using Editor / Combiner,

  • or improved with upscaling and enhancement tools.

In this context, Photoshoot acts as a fast base generator, which can then be polished to perfection.

When NSFW Photoshoot Makes Sense

This tool is especially useful when:

  • you already have a character’s face and body;

  • you want a full photoshoot, not a single image;

  • you need to test different 18+ themes quickly;

  • body and appearance consistency is critical.

In practice, with just two clicks, you can generate a complete NSFW photoset that can then be:

  • published as-is,

  • or used as a foundation for further work.

Conclusion

NSFW Photoshoot is a natural extension of safe-for-work photoshoots, with stricter requirements for references. When face and body are prepared correctly, the tool allows you to create not safe for work photosets very quickly and reliably for existing characters.

It’s one of the most efficient ways to scale 18+ content without diving into complex prompts or manually assembling each scene.

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