Ninglz
New member
Hey everyone,
Like a lot of you, I burn way too much time (and money) sourcing images for my sites — blog headers, thumbnails, product mockups, social cards. I've been using a tool called Inkfox AI to cut that down, and figured it might be useful to the webmasters here.
Site: https://inkfox.app
What it does, in plain terms — it's one workspace instead of five separate tools:
Question for the group: for those of you generating images for your sites, what's still missing from AI tools that makes you fall back to stock or a designer? Curious what the real gaps are.
Cheers.
Like a lot of you, I burn way too much time (and money) sourcing images for my sites — blog headers, thumbnails, product mockups, social cards. I've been using a tool called Inkfox AI to cut that down, and figured it might be useful to the webmasters here.
Site: https://inkfox.app
What it does, in plain terms — it's one workspace instead of five separate tools:
- Text-to-image with several models (Nano Banana 2.0, GPT Image 2.0, Flux, Seedream), so you can match different looks for different pages.
- Reference editing — upload an image and change one part (swap a background, tweak a product) while keeping the rest intact. Handy for on-brand variations.
- Photo-to-video / short clips — turn a still into a short animated clip for social or hero sections.
- One-click presets — virtual try-on (sunglasses, hats, glasses, etc.) and scene presets like headshots and product shots, no prompt-writing needed.
- No signup to try — you get free credits, so you can test it on a real task before committing.
- No stock-photo licensing headache for the kind of generic visuals most pages need.
- Results are organized by prompt, so you're not digging through a folder of final_v3_REAL.png files.
Question for the group: for those of you generating images for your sites, what's still missing from AI tools that makes you fall back to stock or a designer? Curious what the real gaps are.
Cheers.