One product photo.Dozens of studio shots.
Feed Pixelshelf a single flatlay. Watch models, lifestyle scenes, and platform-ready crops materialize — before your photographer finishes their coffee.

Drop your product photo here
PNG, JPG, WEBP · Max 50MB



Your current product photos are costing you sales.

Cluttered Background
Shoppers bounce in 1.2s

Harsh Lighting
Color mismatch complaints

Wrong Aspect Ratio
Auto-cropped on mobile

Inconsistent SKUs
40 SKUs, 40 different styles
Every format. Every platform. Every SKU.
40 SKUs.
8 minutes.
Upload your entire catalog. Pixelshelf processes every product simultaneously — not sequentially. Your content calendar clears itself.

Your brand DNA,
locked in.
Train Pixelshelf on your brand colors, tone, and aesthetic. Every generated image feels like it came from the same shoot.
Right format. Right platform. Every time.
One generation, six platform-optimized crops. Pixelshelf knows Amazon wants 1:1, TikTok wants 9:16, and Pinterest wants 2:3 — and delivers all of them automatically.

Models. Scenes. Moments.
Brooklyn rooftops. Milan marble. Vapor gradients. Your product, everywhere it needs to be.
The listing with the better image wins.
Real numbers from Shopify merchants, DTC brands, and Amazon sellers.

"We had 40 SKUs that needed hero images by Friday. By Thursday afternoon, every single one was done — and they looked like we'd spent a week in a studio."

"I switched my hero images on a Tuesday. By Thursday I had the Buy Box on three listings that had been fighting for it for months. The image quality is that impactful."

"Our photographer costs us $4,000 per shoot. With Pixelshelf we're generating studio-quality lifestyle shots for under $200 a month. The math is brutal — in a good way."

"I run a one-person store. Before Pixelshelf, every product launch was a 3-week ordeal waiting for photography slots. Now I launch whenever I want."

"The brand kit feature is what sold me. Every image feels like it came from the same shoot, same DP, same art direction. Our feed has never looked more cohesive."