Image-to-Image

Was ist Image-to-Image?

Image-to-image takes a photo or illustration you already have and transforms it into something new ( changing the style, mood, or content ) while keeping the basic composition and structure of the original image.

Auf einen Blick

Auch bekannt als
Img2imgImage-guided generationStyle transfer (in some contexts)
Verwendet für
Applying artistic styles to existing images or photographsRefining and iterating AI-generated outputsAdapting rough sketches into finished illustrationsMaking targeted aesthetic changes while preserving composition
Gängige Tools
Stable diffusion (AUTOMATIC1111, ComfyUI)Midjourney (image prompting)Adobe fireflyRunwayCanva AI
Verwandte Begriffe
Text-to-imageInpaintingOutpaintingDenoising strengthImage-to-video

Bereit loszulegen?

Inszenieren Sie Szenen, gestalten Sie Charaktere und liefern Sie ganze Filme

Die All-in-one-KI-Kreativplattform mit einfachen, transparenten Preisen, ohne Geschwindigkeitsdrosselung und mit unendlicher Canvas für maximale Kreativität.

Im Vergleich

Im Vergleich

Image-to-imageinpainting

image-to-image applies a transformation to the entire image or a large portion of it, guided by the source structure. Inpainting applies generation only to a specifically masked region within an image, leaving the unmasked areas completely unchanged. For targeted fixes to small areas of an otherwise acceptable image, inpainting is more appropriate; for wholesale style transformations applied to the full composition, image-to-image is the right approach.


Stellen Sie es sich vor wie…

Think of image-to-image like using a photograph as a colouring-book outline: the photographer took the picture and fixed the composition, and now you are asking an AI to paint it in a completely different style, as if the same scene had been captured by a different artist at a different time. The composition stays roughly the same, but everything about the visual treatment ( colour, texture, style, mood ) can be completely transformed by the model.


Profi-Tipp

The denoising strength parameter is the single most important control in image-to-image workflows and is worth experimenting with carefully on each new project. For stylistic transformations where the source composition should be preserved, values in the 0.4–0.6 range often produce the best balance between retaining the original's structure and allowing the model enough creative latitude to produce a convincing transformation. Very high values (above 0.8) are closer to text-only generation and should be used when only a loose structural reference is desired.

Arten und Varianten

  • Image-to-image generation exists in several operational variants depending on how the source image conditioning is applied.
  • Standard img2img uses a single source image with a text prompt and denoising strength parameter to control transformation intensity.
  • Style transfer approaches use one image as a style reference and another as the content source, applying the aesthetic of the style image to the structure of the content image.
  • ControlNet-based image-to-image uses extracted structural information ( depth maps, edge maps, pose skeletons ) from a source image as precise conditioning rather than pixel-level initialisation, preserving specific structural qualities more reliably than standard img2img.
  • Reference image conditioning in models like Midjourney and DALL-E 3 uses an image as a loose stylistic guide without direct pixel influence, producing outputs that are inspired by the reference without being structurally derived from it.

Bereit, Ihre erste Szene in Morphic zu erstellen?

Morphic ausprobieren

Typische Anwendungsfälle

  • Photographers and visual artists use image-to-image to explore stylistic variations on existing work: applying painterly, illustrative, or genre-specific treatments to photographs while preserving their composition.
  • Concept artists use it to rapidly iterate on design directions, refining rough sketches into polished concepts across multiple style explorations.
  • AI content creators use it to correct and improve previously generated images that are structurally good but need aesthetic adjustment.
  • Product designers and marketers adapt existing product imagery into different visual styles, environments, or contexts without reshooting.

Bereit loszulegen?

Inszenieren Sie Szenen, gestalten Sie Charaktere und liefern Sie ganze Filme

Die All-in-one-KI-Kreativplattform mit einfachen, transparenten Preisen, ohne Geschwindigkeitsdrosselung und mit unendlicher Canvas für maximale Kreativität.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

What is image-to-image AI generation?
Image-to-image is a generation workflow in which an existing image serves as the input alongside a text prompt, with the model transforming the source while preserving aspects of its composition or structure. It differs from text-to-image generation, which builds entirely from a written description without a visual starting point.
What is denoising strength in image-to-image?
Denoising strength controls how much the model transforms the source image. At low values (near 0), the output closely resembles the source with minimal changes. At high values (near 1), the source provides only a rough structural suggestion and the model applies a substantial transformation. The optimal value depends on how much of the original's composition should be preserved versus reimagined.
How is image-to-image different from text-to-image?
Text-to-image generates an image entirely from a written description, starting from random noise with no visual starting point. Image-to-image uses an existing image as a partial initialisation: starting the denoising process with a visual structure already in place: and the text prompt guides how that structure is transformed rather than describing the full composition from scratch.
What is img2img?
Img2img is the common abbreviation for image-to-image, widely used within the Stable Diffusion community and in tool interfaces. The terms are used interchangeably and refer to the same generation approach in which an existing image is used as input alongside a text prompt to guide transformation.
Can I use image-to-image to change the style of a photograph?
Yes. Applying an artistic style to a photograph while preserving its composition is one of the most common uses of image-to-image generation. By setting a moderate denoising strength and including a style-describing prompt, the model can transform the photograph's visual treatment while retaining its subjects, framing, and spatial relationships.
What is ControlNet and how does it relate to image-to-image?
ControlNet is a conditional control system for diffusion models that uses extracted structural information from a source image ( such as edge maps, depth maps, or pose skeletons ) as precise conditioning rather than direct pixel initialisation. It is a more advanced form of image-based conditioning that allows specific structural qualities to be preserved much more reliably than standard img2img, and is widely used for character pose control, architectural layout matching, and other cases where precise structural adherence is critical.
What is the difference between image-to-image and inpainting?
Image-to-image applies a transformation to the whole image or a substantial portion of it, guided by the visual structure of the source. Inpainting applies generation specifically to a masked region, leaving unmasked areas unchanged. For correcting or replacing specific small areas of an otherwise acceptable image, inpainting is more precise; for applying a wholesale stylistic transformation to the full composition, image-to-image is the more appropriate approach.
What inputs does image-to-image require?
Standard image-to-image requires the source image, a text prompt describing the desired output, and a denoising strength value. Some workflows add additional conditioning such as negative prompts to exclude unwanted elements, seed values for reproducibility, and model-specific parameters. More advanced workflows using ControlNet also require specifying which type of structural conditioning to extract from the source image.
Can't find what you are looking for?
Contact us and let us know.
bg