Interesting conversation concerning whether or not the person in the picture needs to be wearing the EXACT model and style number of T-shirt as listed in the description. 🤔 E.g., the person needs to wear a Bella canvas 3001 if that's what is being listed in the description even if the naked eye can't determine the difference. There are people who are suing fast food restaurants for displaying pictures of food that look nothing like the actual food they purchased. Mashed potatoes, with food coloring, have been utilized for pictures of ice-cream in advertisements (and colored Cauliflower) since the ice-cream would melt under the heat of the studio lamps. Subterfuge!?! Need there be a asterisked full disclosure? How far down the rabbit hole do we go? For me - I'm good as long as there really isn't mashed potatoes (or Cauliflower) inside of the ice-cream container. If the style of the shirt in the picture is different than the one I receive, E.g., it's a short-sleeved T-shirt but a 3/4 sleeved arrives, or if the picture shows a crew neck T-shirt and a V-neck T-shirt arrives, etc., then I would agree that the exact T-shirt being sold needs to be in the picture. I believe that people are more concerned with was is printed on the T-shirt. If the lettering/design/colors/pictures/size/centering matches what is in the mockup then people will be happy.
This is the question I wanted to ask. Right now, I'm using mockups within Gelato, my POD partner right now, because at least I know that my mockups are wearing the exact brand and model number I'm selling like on Placeit. Because I too worry about those people who are sue happy lol. But, I also wonder how many of those types of people I'd have to worry about selling apparel.
Perhaps it would be beneficial for us to include a disclaimer stating that the models may not be wearing the exact make/style number that is listed in the description. Also - we reserve the right to ship a different make/style number, of equal or greater value, in the event the one listed in the description is temporarily out of stock. We can also give them the option of waiting for the item to be back in stock or ship the alternative. @@SportsSimp
the image wont have the real tshirt on it though right? so the tshirt style may not match the tshirt youre selling? is there a way to make sure the tshirt is exactly the tshirt your selling? like a bella canvas 3001 vs a comfort colors c1717?
That’s correct. It won’t be the exact t-shirt but still does well to give your customer a visual representation of what the design looks like on a real person. To answer the second part - not (yet) with A.i.
Nice job. Canva I have a feeling is using the same woman somehow except it can’t figure out teeth nor fingers. Kinda creepy. I will check out midjourney soon.
Thank you for your tutorial. Im having trouble saving the design for it to go onto my shirt after I turn layer 2 into a smart object. It only has the option to save as...any ideas what Im doing wrong? Thanks
After you turn it into a smart object, you will double click on the smart object to open it in photoshop as it’s own photoshop project. From there, you will have the option to “save” as long as you have made a change to the smart object. If you haven’t added anything or edited anything, you won’t have the option to save.
You are a great teacher! I learned a lot. Next can you work on how to get a specific item of clothing onto a model? For example: a sweater I made that am selling? It feels like AI is not quite there yet.
I appreciate the comment, but not clickbait at all in my opinion. In the past, you would have to take these photos with a real camera. The mockup (and in many cases the art) is generated with AI. I'm just placing the art on the mockup with photoshop.
awesome and clear video Kerry! thanks for producing great content! Is it possible to add a product or an item of clothing to the model? or only prints? thanks
I’m not sure I totally understand the question, but I think what you’re asking is if you can ask it to add additional items to the A.i. image? You definitely could, but no guarantee that it will interpret it in the desired way.
I created an image with 3 T-shirts. Occasionally when I create the clipping mask it removes one of the shirts designs. Why is that? The other issue I ran into is that it will completely change the color profile of the smart object image.
This is absolutely awesome. I have a quick question. If a baby doll and I am looking to create a mock of baby sleeping with it in a crib anychance you can help show how I can do it please?
Is there a way to put a specific pair of sunglasses on the AI generated model? I'm working on something for a client of mine, they make sunglasses and want them on a large number of different models.
too complicated! Why a clipping mask? just drag the logo on a new layer and work with the blend modes and the blend-if adjustments. The logo is also too „straight“. You should distirt it a little bit.
Thank you so much for this video, I couldn't find the exact mockup that I was looking for even on placeit, you solved my problem with this tutorial THANK YOU! 🙂
So basically you're showing how to create an AI image (which you could also do inside Photoshop) and then add the mockup by yourself. This is not a tutorial how to let AI make a mockup
Thank you.This is what I have been looking for. Now is there a way to change the color of the shirt of the Ai image so you can see the same mock up but different color shirts?
@@KerryEgeler No, thank you! Last night I download two images from Midjourney to use as mockups, and today I’m gonna hit up your video again for the tutorial in back-half🙏
@@SportsSimp If you have basic t-shirts and coffee cups it's probably fine. I have a lot of different types of dresses and Hawaiian shirts and a lot of AOP stuff. I can't use anything from Placeit.
Places like Etsy are starting to crack down on people not using photos of actual products. Unfortunately, many mock-up stores are leading people down a primrose path.
That had nothing to do with print on demand designs. That’s been debated and verified back in October. They didn’t shut shops down because of AI mock-ups.
You made to many task. You don't have to make a square , just open up another page with the image and drag it on the shirt. Fewer steps is better. Time is money
“Fewer steps is better”…except when you have to repeat those same few steps for every new design. A little critical thinking would have informed you that the box is not only to help the audience visualize the print area but also to give a target for the smart object, you know, so you can make the entire process simply repeatable for future designs. Remember dawg, a sort of wise man once said, “Time is money.”
Thank you for taking the time to teach us what’s new. Question, Is there an AI tool that can import my beginning design and enhance it….just wondering?
There is so much out there. It depends on the enhancement you want to do. The one that comes to mind is Canva’s expand feature. You can upload your image and it can add/take away/expand upon it with Ai.
people use these kinds of things all the time with real people...there really is no difference at all...in fact this is way better than getting a whole model etc.
@@KerryEgeler is it a mockup of the product being sold or a generic t-shirt? With a system like placeit, you make mockups using photos of the actual garment. If you’re selling Gildan 5000, you find photos of that.
Hi Kerry! I left a compliment and comment last week I was hoping to get an answer to regarding Midjourney. I’m not seeing my comment in the list. Would it be better to write up my question again or send an email? Thanks!