u/Budget-Albatross5253

Image 1 — Guess which one stopped the scroll more? 👀
Image 2 — Guess which one stopped the scroll more? 👀
Image 3 — Guess which one stopped the scroll more? 👀
Image 4 — Guess which one stopped the scroll more? 👀
Image 5 — Guess which one stopped the scroll more? 👀

Guess which one stopped the scroll more? 👀

POV:
One jewellery brand spent ₹2L on a traditional shoot.
Another uploaded 3 product images into AI.

The scary part isn’t that AI is getting good.
It’s that most people can’t even tell the difference anymore.

Traditional shoot:
• studio booking
• models
• retouching
• multiple approvals
• weeks of execution

AI workflow:
• upload product
• choose aesthetic
• generate campaign-ready visuals in minutes

And honestly?
For fast-moving brands, content velocity is becoming more important than perfection.

Not saying traditional shoots are dead.
But AI just made “premium-looking content” accessible to everyone.

Luxury is no longer about who can produce content.
It’s about who can produce taste consistently.

Would you still pay for a full-scale jewellery shoot in 2026? Or is AI already good enough for most campaigns?

u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 11 days ago

Easy AI tool - For Jewellery Brands

Still creating brand content across 5 different tools?
That’s the old workflow.

With Lamina, you can generate high-quality creatives for jewellery brands, fashion labels, service businesses, UGC campaigns, and so much more — all in one place.

From product visuals to scroll-stopping ads, the possibilities are insanely customisable.
Build your own workflows, automate repetitive tasks, and create content that actually feels on-brand.

Whether you’re scaling a clothing label or testing fresh UGC concepts, Lamina becomes your creative operating system.

Why wait?
Explore the universe of AI-powered content creation and build your workflow your way.

u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 12 days ago

Tried making Amazon listing creatives this morning with Lamina and I genuinely didn’t expect it to be this easy.

I’m used to AI tools turning into:
prompt engineering marathons

fixing weird inconsistencies

regenerating outputs 20 times

watching tutorials just to get one decent result

But this was literally:
upload product → generate → done.
Made multiple listing images in under 5 mins and the outputs actually looked usable.
Feels like we’re entering the phase where the best AI products won’t be the “smartest” ones…
They’ll be the ones that remove the most friction.
Curious what everyone else is using right now for product creatives / listing images?

u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 13 days ago

I think Amazon product shoots are slowly becoming optional.

Uploaded ONE product image into Lamina and got:

  • Hero banners
  • Ingredient creatives
  • Lifestyle ads
  • Comparison charts
  • Premium listing visuals

…all in about 15 minutes.

No studio setup.
No photographer.
No designer.
No prompt engineering.

What surprised me most wasn’t the speed.
It was the quality.

Most AI ecommerce creatives still look obviously fake.
But these actually feel like premium DTC brand assets.

Used an Indē Wild hair oil image for this test and the outputs honestly looked better than a lot of Amazon listings I see daily.

Curious what people here think:

Would you trust AI-generated creatives for your Amazon/store listings yet?

reddit.com
u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 14 days ago

Lamina is an OS for creative AI workflows.

Connect your storefronts, social platforms, workflows, CMS, storage, and AI agents - all in one place.
Generate, orchestrate, automate, and publish directly from a single platform. ⚡

u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 14 days ago

Same prompt. No edits.

Surprisingly, one felt way more “real” — like actual UGC you’d trust.

If you're using AI for content or ads, this difference is huge.

Which one do you think wins? Try yourself!!

app.uselamina.ai
u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 17 days ago

I used to think more tools = more output.
So I had everything.

Writing tools. Video tools. Automation tools. Tools that connect other tools.

My workflow looked like a tech bro starter pack.
But weird thing?
I was spending more time deciding which tool to use than actually creating.
Last night I snapped.

Canceled almost everything.
Kept one core setup. Simple. Clean. Fast.
And suddenly… things started moving again.
But here’s the part I can’t figure out—
Did I just remove noise?
Or did I quietly give up control to one system that now thinks for me?

Like…
At what point does your “AI stack” stop being a tool
and start becoming your default way of thinking?
Curious what others are doing—
Are you stacking 5+ tools and loving it?
Or have you found your “one” and never looked back?

And honestly… do you feel more creative now, or just more efficient?
Drop your stack. Or don’t.
Kinda feels like that says something too.

u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 18 days ago

Anyone else juggling 4–5 tools just to launch one product?

Reddit posts here, LinkedIn there, then figuring out captions, creatives, videos… it adds up fast.

I’ve been testing something that actually simplifies this—lets you generate launch content for multiple platforms (ads, posts, carousels, videos) in one place.

You basically input product details + images, and it gives you ready-to-publish content.

Not perfect, but honestly saves hours. Curious if others here have tried similar tools or still doing it manually?

u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 20 days ago

12 months ago, AI visuals still needed a human in the loop. That's changed faster than most people realize.

Our team mapped the full shift — from AI-generated visuals to fully autonomous content pipelines.

Short report. Big shift.

reddit.com
u/Budget-Albatross5253 — 21 days ago