The gap between a convincing face swap and an obvious fake almost always comes down to inputs, not the AI model. Here's what actually drives quality.
1. Source Photo Quality Is Everything
Your source face photo is the single biggest factor in the final result. The ideal source photo has:
- Even, soft lighting — studio lighting or natural window light is ideal
- Direct or near-direct eye contact with the camera
- Sharp focus — motion blur kills swap quality
- High resolution — phone cameras work fine, filtered selfies don't
- Neutral expression — relaxed face, mouth closed or slightly open
2. Match the Lighting
This is the most overlooked factor. The AI adapts skin tone and blending automatically, but it can't fully compensate for completely different lighting environments. A source photo taken under warm indoor light will blend differently into a video shot in harsh outdoor daylight.
Practical tip: if your target video has a specific lighting style (warm, cool, dramatic shadows), try to find or take a source photo with similar conditions.
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Modern AI handles angle differences well, but extreme mismatches produce weaker results. A straight-on source photo into a video where the subject is consistently at a 45° profile angle will produce decent but not perfect results. When you can control the source photo, try to approximate the angles that appear most in your target video.
4. Target Video Quality
Low-resolution or heavily compressed target videos limit the output quality. Start with the best source material you have. A 4K source video with a 720p phone selfie as source face will still produce a 4K output — but the face region quality will be limited by the source photo resolution.
5. Face Size in Frame
The target face needs to be large enough in the video frame for the AI to accurately detect and track it. Faces that take up less than ~5% of the frame area may produce inconsistent tracking across frames.
6. What to Do When Results Look Off
- Blurry or smeared result → source photo resolution too low
- Skin color mismatch → lighting conditions differ too much
- Seams around face edges → try a source photo with better contrast from background
- Inconsistent across frames → face not consistently visible in target video
- Unnatural eye area → source photo has sunglasses, closed eyes, or heavy eye shadow
In testing, switching from a filtered social media selfie to a raw, well-lit photo improved result quality significantly on the same model and video.
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