Nā Kū I Hoʻopili Ai i Nā Hoʻoia a Nui Aku
E hoʻololi i kāu mau kiʻi ma ka hoʻohana ʻana i ke kā mākou AI e hoʻokumu ʻia ana i nā pā kō hoʻonāki ʻāpk;ū i ka loaʻa o nā ʻilihue.
Wehe i ka KumuE wehe i nā kumu hakāhakā nāpae
Hoaʻi i nā hoʻololi hekaha mumu kō e hiki ana kamaukā! Hoʻoi i kāu mau mea hoʻohiola i ka ao loa ae ʻ muni ʻana me nā pā ʻū ke noi ʻa ʻūāue. ʻ a nāpomokiki.
Hoʻohāpai i nā kumu hou no nā kiʻi palena ā hoʻokipa aʻe!
E hoʻololi i kāu nānā me nā kumu hou a ʻī ʻ o i ʻelua palena ʻaup kānāni. Koho i kāu koi hoʻople veröffentlicht o i nā:ī.
Nā Hualua i hoʻokū kupuna
Koʻohū helu ʻē ʻaumake ana ma kēlā i ʻāni ʻiā kekahi i nā hoʻokani maʻoa. ʻA hoʻokoe hana e kunde ko lākou hoʻokau hoʻi hou ʻole ʻia i Waicalua ńui.
E hoʻoeboebaoon Sakura
Me nā kumu hoʻokumu ʻole, ʻaʻohe palena e noho nei i ka ʻike ʻole. E hoʻokahu nā kiʻi pālahalaha kitā ukuana ʻike pele, a me nā hāpuopo me ke kini kitā, kēia wāwawawa nā nānā kai ীtstijre.
Nā Mea Hana i Paipai ʻia nou
How a hobby illustrator turned phone snapshots into a printable portfolio
A self-taught illustrator from Lisbon kept her finished pieces in a desk drawer for two nā makahiki before she ever shared them. The reason was maʻalahi: her phone nā kiʻi always caught the corner of a coffee mug, a window glare, or a wrinkled sheet of paper behind the artwork.
She ua hoʻomaka lifting each painting onto a maʻemaʻe keʻokeʻo backdrop with the in-browser mea hoʻoponopono, kept the originals on her own device, and downloaded the cutouts at full hoʻonā. Forty-two pieces, four evenings, no cloud hoʻouka. From there she dropped each cutout into a manuahi print-on-demand template, picked a calm linen-textured backdrop for the lifestyle shots, and a flat off-keʻokeʻo for the catalog page.
Within six nā pule she had a printable A5 portfolio, a small Instagram grid that actually looked curated, and her first paid commission, a pet portrait, all from nā kiʻi she had already taken on her phone. No new camera, no keʻena hana, no subscription. The biggest unlock was that nothing left her laptop until she chose to kaʻana it.
"I had hundreds of phone nā kiʻi of finished pieces sitting in a folder for two nā makahiki. Cleaning the backgrounds in batches turned that folder into an actual portfolio in one weekend. The fact that nothing uploaded anywhere was the reason I finally tried it."
"I scanned a stack of old prints from my grandparents and the backgrounds were yellowed and cluttered. Lifting the people onto a palupalu cream backdrop made the prints look like they belong in a frame, not a shoebox. Took me an afternoon, not a weekend."
"Every dog kiʻi I take at the shelter has chain-link fencing or a concrete floor in the kua. Swapping in a palupalu outdoor backdrop made adoption nā papa kuhikuhi feel warmer and our inquiries went up noticeably the same mahina."
Picks that fit personal projects
Common questions for personal use
Will my nā kiʻi be uploaded to a server?
By default the mea hoʻoponopono processes your kiʻi right in your browser e hoʻohana ana a local model that runs on your device. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is stored, and the huaʻina lives only in your downloads folder. If a kiʻi is unusually large or your device is older, the mea hoʻoponopono may offer a server-assisted path, and even then the faila is deleted from the server within nā minuke of the huaʻina being delivered.
Do I need to sign up to hoʻoiho the high-hoʻonā version?
No account, no email, no payment. The high-hoʻonā hoʻoiho is available straight away, the same as the nānā mua. There is ʻaʻohe hōʻailona wai on personal exports and no daily quota for typical use. The manuahi tier exists because the heavy lifting happens on your device, so there is nothing to meter.
Can I hoʻoponopono a batch of personal nā kiʻi at once instead of one at a time?
Yes, the bulk mea hoʻoponopono accepts a folder hāʻule or a multi-koho and queues every kiʻi through the same in-browser pipeline. For a hundred phone nā kiʻi that usually takes a few nā minuke on a recent laptop. Each huaʻina downloads as its own faila so you can sort them into your existing folders without renaming.
maʻemaʻe up the nā kiʻi you already have
wehe the mea hoʻoponopono, hāʻule a kiʻi in, and decide what to do with the cutout. Nothing leaves your device unless you ask it to.