This effect transforms the person in your photo into a block-style figure while keeping the pose and overall identity readable. You get one edited image with a toy-like or voxel-inspired look built from simplified blocky forms.
Learn more about
Learn more about
When you upload source_image (image: Your photo), Block Figure analyzes the main person, maps their body proportions and silhouette, and then rebuilds the scene using chunky geometric volumes instead of natural curves.
The AI pays close attention to pose direction, clothing zones, hair shape, and standout color areas so the figure still feels like the same person.
Rather than tracing every detail, it decides which features are essential enough to keep readable in a cube-based style—like glasses, hats, bright shoes, or a jacket outline.
It also simplifies textures and edges across the frame so the finished image feels cohesive, more like a constructed character render than a standard photo filter.

It converts the subject into a blocky figure style. The final image keeps the original pose and general appearance but simplifies everything into a more geometric look.
They can work, but half-body or full-body images are usually better. The block-figure style reads more clearly when more of the subject is visible.
Usually yes, somewhere in that range. The effect tends to produce a simplified, constructed figure with a playful block-based appearance.
It can, but the effect usually reads best when one subject is clearly dominant. In group shots, smaller faces and overlapping bodies may be simplified unevenly, so individual people can become harder to distinguish.
Sometimes major details carry through, but small graphics and intricate patterns are often reduced into broader shapes or color blocks. If one accessory matters, use a photo where it is large, clear, and not partially hidden.
Yes. All content generated on Flashloop can be used for commercial purposes — social media, ads, client work, product listings. No additional licensing fees.