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Sumaqkamuykaruchi Qhipikuna Suwallayniykiku

Karu karumikiku tukuy AI p'unchaw

Karukuniy Ima Kar

Llapa t'aqsiykuna Tiksi

Kamuminispaq hazqaya ima kar nimanilla

Tikriyaykinku qhipis yachaqkaru ima

Tupayquna niyskikunapi kamukikuna

Huñoykaraki Imamanta Kawsaku

Ima qarqarimanta qhipikuna ima kunapuni

Ch'usqra Qhipikuna Ima

Qhipis qipikuna ima chawpikuna, kawachipuniq

Qampaq Kamachisqa Llamk'anakunata

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 watakuna before she ever shared them. The reason was qhasilla: her phone siq'ikuna always caught the corner of a coffee mug, a window glare, or a wrinkled sheet of paper behind the artwork.

She qallarisqa lifting each painting onto a ch'uya yuraq backdrop with the in-browser allichaq, kept the originals on her own device, and downloaded the cutouts at full resolución. Forty-two pieces, four evenings, no cloud apachiy. From there she dropped each cutout into a qhasilla print-on-demand template, picked a calm linen-textured backdrop for the lifestyle shots, and a flat off-yuraq for the catalog page.

Within six semanakuna she had a printable A5 portfolio, a small Instagram grid that actually looked curated, and her first paid commission, a pet portrait, all from siq'ikuna she had already taken on her phone. No new camera, no ruway wasi, no subscription. The biggest unlock was that nothing left her laptop until she chose to rakiy it.

"I had hundreds of phone siq'ikuna of finished pieces sitting in a folder for two watakuna. 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."
Hobby illustrator Personal portfolio
"I scanned a stack of old prints from my grandparents and the backgrounds were yellowed and cluttered. Lifting the people onto a llamp'u cream backdrop made the prints look like they belong in a frame, not a shoebox. Took me an afternoon, not a weekend."
Family siq'i archivist Personal use
"Every dog siq'i I take at the shelter has chain-link fencing or a concrete floor in the qhipa. Swapping in a llamp'u outdoor backdrop made adoption rikuchiykuna feel warmer and our inquiries went up noticeably the same killa."
Volunteer dog rescuer Adoption profiles

Picks that fit personal projects

Common questions for personal use

Will my siq'ikuna be uploaded to a server?

By default the allichaq processes your siq'i right in your browser llank'achispa a local model that runs on your device. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is stored, and the ruwasqa lives only in your downloads folder. If a siq'i is unusually large or your device is older, the allichaq may offer a server-assisted path, and even then the archivo is deleted from the server within minutokuna of the ruwasqa being delivered.

Do I need to sign up to uray apay the high-resolución version?

No account, no email, no payment. The high-resolución uray apay is available straight away, the same as the qhawariy. There is mana sello unuchu on personal exports and no daily quota for typical use. The qhasilla tier exists because the heavy lifting happens on your device, so there is nothing to meter.

Can I allichay a batch of personal siq'ikuna at once instead of one at a time?

Yes, the bulk allichaq accepts a folder kachay or a multi-akllay and queues every siq'i through the same in-browser pipeline. For a hundred phone siq'ikuna that usually takes a few minutokuna on a recent laptop. Each ruwasqa downloads as its own archivo so you can sort them into your existing folders without renaming.

ch'uya up the siq'ikuna you already have

kichay the allichaq, kachay a siq'i in, and decide what to do with the cutout. Nothing leaves your device unless you ask it to.

Tikraykaruniy Qhipis Tukuy