Blog
Industry notes from the team behind PHAiTO
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A comparison of the best Ai photo editors for wedding photographers
Five Ai editing tools, ranked for wedding work — high-volume cull and edit, ceremony lighting consistency, and gallery turnaround. PHAiTO, Imagen Ai, Aftershoot, Luminar Neo, and Evoto.
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A comparison of the best Ai photo editors for real estate photographers
Five Ai editing tools, ranked for real estate and architecture photographers — bracketed exposure handling, vertical correction, listing-day turnaround, and consistent batch output.
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A comparison of the best Ai photo editors for portrait photographers
Five Ai editing tools, ranked for portrait studios and individual portrait photographers — skin tone fidelity, per-face retouching, and consistency across a session.
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You've got the edits — now make them work for you: a photographer's SEO guide
Six concrete tactics for turning your photo library into a steady source of inbound bookings — from blog post structure to Pinterest pin design to Google Business posts.
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Meet PHAiTO: Ai-powered photo editing built for photographers
A tour of what PHAiTO does today — culling, editing, personalization, and pre-built Looks — and where it fits in your post-shoot workflow.
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A comparison of the best Ai photo editors for branding & lifestyle photographers
Five Ai editing tools, ranked for branding, commercial, and lifestyle photographers — brand-consistent colour, controlled finishing, and the taste needed for paid client work.
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A comparison of the best Ai photo editing tools: PHAiTO, Imagen Ai, Aftershoot, Luminar Neo, and Evoto
A side-by-side look at five leading Ai editing platforms — what each does well, what each costs, and how to choose based on the work you actually do.
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How to Take Amazing Real-Estate Photos
Five practical tips for taking real-estate photos that actually help sell homes — natural light, staging, wide-angle lenses, bracketing, tripod use, and editing with PHAiTO.
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Is Ai photo editing right for you?
An honest look at when Ai editing earns its place in a photographer's workflow, when it doesn't, and the four criteria that matter when evaluating a tool.