Same dog, wildly different daydream.
Each before/after pair uses a matching source dog and generated result, so the transformation feels personal instead of random.






Turn your actual dog into a pirate, astronaut, hot dog, royal portrait, or full main character while keeping the face and markings people recognize.


Each before/after pair uses a matching source dog and generated result, so the transformation feels personal instead of random.






The best result is not just a costume. It is the costume your dog somehow looks born to wear.
For dogs who already patrol the house like they own the harbor.
pirate captain + wooden ship + dramatic portrait
Food-costume chaos for birthdays, cookouts, and friends who love a dumb joke.
hot dog costume + picnic backdrop + funny close-up
A cleaner, poster-style look for the dog who deserves a space program.
astronaut suit + moon surface + heroic lighting
Polished enough to frame, funny because everyone knows who actually runs the house.
royal oil painting + velvet cape + noble expressionA clear face and visible markings help the result stay recognizably your dog.
Bright, ordinary phone photos usually train better than dark action shots.
Your dog + one costume + one setting + one mood + 'keep my dog's real face and markings recognizable.'
One strong idea usually looks better than pirate-astronaut-superhero chaos.
Oversized helmets and masks can cover the exact thing that makes it feel like your dog.
Send the before first, then drop the costume version.
Post 3 looks and ask friends which one is most accurate.
Use the clean royal, astronaut, or cowboy shot as an avatar.
Turn sweater or pumpkin looks into seasonal greetings.
Print the one that captures the dog’s personality best.
Upload clear photos of your dog, train their likeness once, then generate costume prompts like pirate captain, astronaut, hot dog, cowboy, royal portrait, or holiday sweater.
Yes. The point is to make costume photos without putting your dog in a real outfit. A clear source photo gives the model the face, markings, and body shape to preserve.
Simple, readable ideas work best: one costume, one setting, and one mood. Pirate dog, astronaut dog, hot dog costume, cowboy dog, royal dog portrait, and holiday-card looks are strong starting points.
Upload your real dog, train their likeness once, then try pirates, food costumes, space scenes, royal portraits, and whatever ridiculous idea fits them next.