This effect converts your photo into an oil painting style image with painterly texture and brush-like detail. You get one edited picture that keeps the original composition but looks like it was painted on canvas.
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When you upload source_image (image: Your photo), the model analyzes the scene layout, subject edges, color relationships, and lighting pattern, then rebuilds the image in an oil-paint aesthetic instead of simply placing a filter on top.
It decides where brush strokes should feel broader, where texture should look thicker, and which details need to stay recognizable so faces, objects, or landmarks still read clearly.
Areas like skin, fabric, foliage, and skies are often interpreted differently, with the AI simplifying some tiny photo detail into painted shapes while emphasizing tonal contrast and surface texture.
The result is a single image that follows your original framing but shifts the visual language from photography to traditional painted artwork.

It restyles the photo to look like an oil painting. The result keeps the main shapes and scene while adding painted texture and brushwork.
Yes, it works for both. Landscapes often look especially good because the painting texture has more room to show in skies, trees, and backgrounds.
Yes, that helps a lot. Better source detail usually leads to a cleaner painted result with more defined texture.
Usually yes, especially if the face is clear in the original image. The effect changes surface detail and texture, but it generally keeps the main facial structure, pose, and expression intact so the person still looks like themselves.
Yes, many people use this style for posters, gifts, and framed keepsakes. Before printing, check the exported image size and preview it at your intended print dimensions so you know how the painted texture will appear on paper or canvas.
Yes. All content generated on Flashloop can be used for commercial purposes — social media, ads, client work, product listings. No additional licensing fees.