
I graded five well-known DTC brands' product photos the way an AI shopping engine does. Three nailed the five-shot set, two didn't, and the gap split cleanly by category.

Short clothing product descriptions that sell: a three-part structure, five before-and-after rewrites, and an AI prompt that cuts the cliches.

An AI shopping agent reads your product page twice: as data to shortlist you, then it sends a buyer to that same page to close. Here's how to design for both readers.

Yes, you can use AI product photos on Amazon, but your main image must be a real photo of the actual product on pure white. Here's what gets approved on a listing and what gets it suppressed.

AI shopping engines now read your product photos, not just your text and feed. Here is the five-shot set they reward, and the feed specs behind getting recommended.

What I'd install on day one, what I'd wait on, and what I'd stop paying for entirely if I were starting a Shopify store in 2026. Six or seven tools, mostly Shopify-native, around $62 a month.

AI UGC tools split into three jobs: avatar talking-heads for paid ads, product-URL-to-ad agents for variant testing, and faceless auto-publishers for organic TikTok. The right pick in each, plus the indie tools real operators are quietly using.

Reusable prompt templates for ecom product photos are a six-part structure, not 30 fill-in-the-blank prompts. The actual prompts I run inside Outfit, across the five shot types every ecom catalog needs.

Most shoppers cannot reliably tell AI product photos from real ones. The ones who can mostly do not care, except in three specific cases this post breaks down.

Apparel is the hardest category for AI product photography. Here is which tool fits which job, from on-model and fit to editorial, cross-category, and batch runs, grounded in 40,000+ real AI apparel generations.

Discover 10 smart domain name tips every brand needs in 2026. Learn how to choose the right domain extension, avoid common mistakes, protect your brand, and build a stronger online presence.

Your brand color is your first impression. Learn how to choose, build, and use a color palette that makes your fashion brand instantly recognizable.
