Most phone product photo guides assume you will shoot first and then open another tool to clean up the image. Portrait Drop is different because the workflow starts in live camera, lets you choose the backdrop before capture, and then applies that selected look to the saved result after the shot so you can move directly into sharing or Create Post.
Launch Portrait Drop to open the live camera workflow used for product capture on Android.
Portrait Drop is strongest when you want to move from camera to final product image without a separate edit queue.
Place the product where the phone can see the full shape clearly. Keep it centered, fully visible, and away from the edges of the frame.
Give the product enough breathing room so the final saved image feels cleaner and more intentional.
Select the backdrop before taking the photo. Pick one that gives the product enough contrast, such as a darker item on a lighter look or a lighter item on a deeper neutral tone.
This is one of the biggest workflow differences in Portrait Drop: the look is chosen before the shot, not after.
Pause for a second before capture. Make sure the product looks clear in frame, the lighting feels usable, and the subject is positioned the way you want before saving the shot.
A five-second framing check usually saves more time than retaking the whole shot.
Tap capture once the product looks balanced and readable in frame. Portrait Drop will process the saved image into a studio-style result.
Hold steady for a moment before tapping so the saved result starts from a cleaner source image.
After capture, save the image locally, share it, or use Create Post to generate hooks, captions, CTAs, hashtags, and selling copy from the exact captured product image.
This makes the workflow especially useful for Etsy, Amazon, Shopify, marketplace listings, and social selling.