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Free vs paid AI

The free tool generates a stranger who looks vaguely like you.

ChatGPT, DALL-E, and Gemini will produce a photo of someone with your name. Aurawave produces a photo of you. The difference is a fine-tuned model on your face plus a working photographer's grading checklist before delivery. Side by side on what each tool actually does.

Built by Joshua Albanese · 20 years behind the lens · 15,000 studio sessions

30-second verdict

The decision in three short paragraphs

Pick Aurawave if

The photo has to actually look like you. Going on LinkedIn, a firm bio, an Avvo profile, or a real estate listing. You want a fine-tuned model on your face plus a grading checklist that runs before delivery.

Use ChatGPT or Gemini if

You want a fun avatar, a fictional character, or a one-off social photo where identity precision does not matter. Free generators are creative tools, not headshot tools. The output is "a person who looks vaguely like you," not you.

The deciding question

Will a colleague who sees you every day recognize the photo as you? If yes, you need a fine-tuned model with grading. If no, free generators work. Aurawave is built for the first case.

Side by side

Aurawave vs ChatGPT, DALL-E, and Gemini

Aurawave ChatGPT / DALL-E / Gemini
Fine-tuned on your face Yes — 30 to 60 minute fine-tune from your 10 selfies No — general-purpose model with no identity training
Identity match About 95% on graded outputs Approximate — outputs look vaguely like the prompt
Grading layer Working photographer's checklist runs on every output No grading; the model returns whatever it generates
Headshot-specific styling Studio lighting, professional wardrobe, neutral backgrounds Generic stock styling; backgrounds and wardrobe vary wildly
Photos delivered About 25 hand-picked photos that all passed grading A few outputs per prompt; no curation
Skin texture Real skin texture preserved Plastic-skin and over-smoothed outputs are common
Catchlight and eye direction Graded for proper catchlight position Inconsistent — eyes often look glassy or off-axis
Cost $19 to $59 one-time pack Free or $20/month for ChatGPT Plus
Use case LinkedIn, firm bio, Avvo, real estate, executive Social avatars, character art, creative one-offs
Redo if it does not look like you Yes, plain-language redo policy Generate again with a different prompt

The mechanism

Why general-purpose models cannot ship a usable headshot

No fine-tuning means no real identity

ChatGPT, DALL-E, and Gemini are general-purpose image generators. You upload a reference photo and prompt "professional headshot of this person in a navy blazer." The model produces a person who has the right hair color, the right age range, and the right glasses. The model does not produce you. The face is approximated from the reference, not learned. A fine-tune on 10 selfies is the difference between "approximate likeness" and "actual you."

No grading means plastic skin and dead eyes

General-purpose image generators optimize for visual coherence and prompt fidelity. They do not optimize for the specific failure modes a headshot photographer grades against. Catchlight in the eye. Pore-level skin texture. Fill ratio between the highlight side and shadow side of the face. The outputs from a free generator look "off" because no human reviewer (or grading model) has filtered the failures before you see them.

The "free" cost is your time

The cheapest paid plans for ChatGPT Plus or Gemini Advanced run $20 a month. Free tiers exist with usage limits. The real cost is the curation work the buyer does. Generating 50 candidate photos to find 2 that look like you is real time. Aurawave's $19 to $59 pack ships about 25 graded photos in 90 minutes. The cost gap collapses once you account for the curation work the free tools push onto the user.

Honest answer

When ChatGPT, DALL-E, or Gemini are the right tool

Be honest about this. Some use cases are better served by a free generator. Aurawave is not the right tool for everything.

  • +Avatar art, character work, fictional portraits. If the photo does not have to be you, free generators are excellent.
  • +Social media one-offs. Profile pics for fun, Twitter avatars, Discord pics. Identity precision does not matter at that stakes level.
  • +Brainstorming a creative direction. Generating mood-board images, exploring styles, or sketching ideas before a real photoshoot.

When the photo has to look like you on a LinkedIn that recruiters scan, on a firm bio that prospects read, or on a real estate listing that decides whether someone clicks, the free tools are the wrong shape. Aurawave is built for that case.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Can I just use ChatGPT to generate my LinkedIn headshot for free?
You can generate something. Whether it looks like you depends on the model and the prompt. Most outputs from a general-purpose model look "approximate" — same hair color, same age range, but the face is not yours. For a casual social photo that is fine. For a LinkedIn that recruiters scan, the precision is not there.
What is the difference between DALL-E and a fine-tuned model?
DALL-E is a general-purpose model trained on billions of images. It generates from text or rough reference. A fine-tuned model is DALL-E (or a similar model) plus 30-60 minutes of training on 10 photos of you specifically. The fine-tune teaches the model your face. Without it, the output is approximation.
Why is the cost of paid AI headshots higher than ChatGPT Plus?
A paid AI headshot service runs the fine-tune on your face, generates 100+ candidate outputs, runs a grading layer to kill failures, and delivers about 25 hand-picked photos. ChatGPT generates one image per prompt with no fine-tune and no curation. The compute cost is much higher per output, plus the working photographer's grading layer.
Can I use Gemini Advanced for a professional headshot?
Gemini Advanced is closer to a fine-tuned tool because it can take a reference photo. The output quality has improved. The remaining gap is the grading layer. Gemini will not throw out drift photos before delivery the way Aurawave does. For a one-off photo where you can pick the best of 5 outputs, it can work. For a curated set of 25 that all pass grading, it does not.
Do free AI tools have a redo policy?
Generate again with a different prompt. There is no formal redo policy because there is no purchased product. Aurawave's redo policy is plain-language: if the photos do not look like you, we redo the whole set within 14 days at no charge.

Get the photo that actually looks like you

Upload 10 selfies. Get a hand-picked set of about 25 graded photos in under 90 minutes. Every photo passes a working photographer's checklist before you see it.