How to Choose the "Right" Photo for Custom Embroidery
Everything that separates a portrait people gasp at from one that just looks "okay" happens before you ever click order — in the photo you choose. This is the complete, no-theory, just-tell-me-what-to-do guide.

Every embroidery design starts life as a photograph on someone's phone. The digitizer who turns that photo into thousands of stitches is talented, but they can only stitch what they can actually see. This guide walks through every variable that affects the outcome — sharpness, contrast, background, and the very different rules for a human face versus an animal's — with specific, concrete guidance you can apply to your own camera roll in the next five minutes.
Section 01
Why the Photo Is the Single Biggest Variable More than style choice, more than thread color, more than garment — this is the one thing entirely in your control
Embroidery digitizing is a translation process. A digitizer looks at your source photo and makes a series of decisions: where the highlight in an eye should sit, which direction the fill stitches should run to suggest fur or hair, where one shade of brown ends and another begins. Every one of those decisions depends on information that has to already exist in the photo. If the detail isn't there, the digitizer isn't guessing wrong on purpose — there's simply nothing to work from, and the result defaults to something flatter and more generic than it could have been.

Section 02
Sharpness & Resolution The difference between a design that looks "painted on" and one that looks slightly melted
Sharpness is the single easiest thing to check and the single most common reason a proof comes back looking softer than expected. A blurry photo doesn't just look blurry in the final embroidery — it forces the digitizer to average out edges that should be crisp, and averaged edges in thread read as puckered or muddy rather than simply "soft focus," which is a much less forgiving look in fabric than it is on a screen.
How to actually test a photo for sharpness
Open the photo on your phone or computer and zoom in to 100% — not the thumbnail, the full file — directly on the eyes (for a person or pet) or the most detailed feature of your subject. If the edge of the eye, the eyelashes, or the whisker line looks crisp at full zoom, the photo is sharp enough. If it looks like a smudge or a soft blur even zoomed in, the photo will not embroider with fine detail, regardless of style.
Resolution: bigger file, better result
Always upload the original camera file, not a screenshot of it, not a photo re-saved from a group chat, and not an image pulled from social media (platforms compress images aggressively on upload). A modern smartphone photo straight from the camera roll is almost always high enough resolution. A screenshot of that same photo, or a version someone re-sent through Messenger three times, has usually lost most of the fine detail the digitizer needs — even though it looks identical to the eye on a small screen.
Sharpness — do this
- Upload directly from the camera roll or cloud backup
- Use the highest resolution export your phone allows
- Zoom to 100% before uploading to confirm focus
- Hold the camera steady, or brace against something solid
Sharpness — avoid this
- Screenshots of photos (always a resolution downgrade)
- Images re-saved multiple times through messaging apps
- Photos pulled from Instagram, Facebook, or other social feeds
- Anything shot in low light without a tripod or steady surface
Section 03
Light & Contrast Why "good light" matters more than a nice setting, an outfit, or a scenic background
Contrast is what lets a digitizer tell where one feature ends and another begins — the edge of a jawline against a neck, the boundary between a dog's dark patch and its lighter fur, the crease of an eyelid. Flat, even lighting (an overcast day, open shade, a softly lit room) actually produces the best contrast for embroidery, because it shows true color and clean edges without harsh shadows or blown-out highlights fighting for attention.

Soft, even light versus the two most common lighting problems: flash washout and strong backlight.
| Lighting type | Effect on embroidery | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Soft outdoor light (overcast sky, open shade) | Even tone across the whole subject, true color reproduction, clean edges for the digitizer to trace | Ideal |
| Window light indoors | Similar benefits to outdoor shade — soft, directional, flattering — as long as the subject faces toward the window | Great |
| Direct flash | Flattens features, blows out highlights (especially on light fur or pale skin), often creates red-eye | Avoid |
| Strong backlight (subject in front of a bright window or sun) | Subject's face falls into shadow, losing exactly the detail the digitizer needs most | Avoid |
| Harsh midday sun | Deep shadows under eyes and chin, squinting, high-contrast patches that read oddly in thread | Avoid if possible |
Section 04
Background Complexity A busy background doesn't just look messy — it actively confuses which details matter
Backgrounds matter more in embroidery than in ordinary photography, because embroidery has to simplify everything into a limited number of thread colors and stitch types. A photo taken against a plain wall, an open sky, or a softly blurred outdoor scene gives the digitizer a clean separation between "subject" and "everything else." A photo taken in a cluttered room, a crowded event, or a patterned setting forces a choice: either the background gets simplified into a muddy blob (which can look unintentional), or detail gets pulled away from the subject to accommodate it.
Backgrounds that work well
- Plain walls, doors, or fences
- Open sky, grass, sand, or water
- Naturally out-of-focus backgrounds (portrait mode)
- A single, simple color behind the subject
Backgrounds that cause problems
- Crowded events, parties, or busy streets
- Bookshelves, patterned wallpaper, or cluttered rooms
- Other people or pets overlapping the main subject
- Strong patterns (stripes, plaid) directly behind the subject
If the only photo you have has a busy background, it isn't disqualifying — just say so in your order notes ("please simplify the background, the focus should be entirely on [subject]"). But when you have a choice between two otherwise similar photos, the one with the cleaner background will consistently produce the more striking result.
Section 05
Choosing a Photo of a Person Faces are read for expression first, features second — pick accordingly

A natural, slightly candid expression translates into embroidery far better than a posed one.
Expression: candid beats "cheese"
A stiff, posed camera-smile tends to flatten into something generic once it's simplified into stitches — the specific things that make a smile look like that person's smile (a slight asymmetry, the way their eyes crinkle, a partial laugh) usually only show up in a more natural moment. Look through photos for one where the person isn't aware of, or isn't fully posing for, the camera.
Angle: face-forward or a clear ¾ profile
A face turned more than about 45 degrees away from the camera hides one eye and distorts the proportions the digitizer works from. Straight-on or a clear three-quarter angle, with both eyes visible, gives the most reliable likeness. A full profile can work beautifully for line-drawing style specifically, but is riskier for full-color portraits.
Framing: get close
The face should fill at least 40% of the photo's frame. If you have to zoom in on your phone just to see the face clearly, that photo is too zoomed-out for good embroidery — the digitizer is working from very few pixels of actual facial detail once it's cropped in.
Obstructions: keep the face clear
Sunglasses, wide-brimmed hats pulled low, hands or hair covering part of the face, and heavy shadow across half the face all remove information the digitizer needs. A pair of clear glasses is generally fine and can even be included in the design; sunglasses are not.
Couples & groups: match the scale
Both people should be roughly the same size in the frame and at a similar distance from the camera — a selfie where one person is much closer than the other creates a scale mismatch that's hard to correct later. A photo taken by a third person, standing back from both subjects, almost always works better than a selfie for this reason.
Section 06
Choosing a Photo of a Pet Different rules entirely — because the "likeness" lives in different places
Pet portraits and human portraits are judged by completely different criteria, and treating a pet photo the same way you'd treat a human portrait photo is one of the most common mistakes people make. With people, expression and framing are almost everything. With animals, three additional factors move to the front: eye level, "the look," and fur/marking clarity.

Shooting from the animal's own eye level captures the expression that actually reads as "them."
| Factor | Human portraits | Pet portraits |
|---|---|---|
| Camera angle | Straight-on or ¾ profile, from a comfortable standing height | Get down to the animal's actual eye level — shooting from above distorts proportions and misses the expression entirely |
| What carries the likeness | Expression, symmetry, and the shape of the smile | The specific intensity or softness in the eyes — often called "the look" — plus distinctive fur patterns or markings |
| Best moment to shoot | A relaxed, unposed moment mid-conversation or mid-laugh | A still moment — sitting or lying down — rather than mid-motion, which introduces blur |
| Color detail that matters | Skin tone, shot in even, flattering light | Precise fur or feather color and pattern — a warm golden-brown reads very differently in thread than a cooler taupe, so accurate color in the photo matters even more here |
| Style recommendation | Cartoon style ages well for children's garments; photorealistic for adults | Photorealistic style is almost always the stronger choice — fur texture and eye color are where an animal's personality lives, and simplified styles can lose that |
Getting "the look"
Anyone who lives with a dog or cat knows they have a particular way of looking at the camera (or at their owner) that feels unmistakably them. That specific expression — not just a technically sharp photo of the animal's face — is what you're hunting for. It's worth taking twenty photos in a session and picking the one where that quality shows up, rather than settling for the first clear shot.
Exotic pets & unusual markings
Rabbits, birds, horses, guinea pigs, and reptiles all embroider successfully — the same rules apply. Animals with distinctive or unusual coloring often produce especially striking results, because the pattern itself gives the digitizer strong, clear information to work from.
Section 07
The Final 60-Second Checklist Run through this before you upload — it catches almost every common issue
Before you upload, confirm:
- Zoomed to 100%, the eyes/key detail are sharp, not smudged
- Uploaded from the original camera roll, not a screenshot or re-send
- Lighting is soft and even — no flash, no strong backlight
- Face or subject fills at least 40% of the frame
- Background is simple, or naturally blurred
- Only one clear subject — no ambiguity about who the portrait is of
- For pets: shot at their eye level, in a still moment
- For people: candid expression, not a stiff posed smile
- You've picked 2–3 backup photos to upload alongside your favorite
Red flags — reconsider or note in comments:
- Photo looks blurry even on a small screen
- Taken with flash, or subject is backlit
- Face is small, angled away, or partially obscured
- Background is cluttered, patterned, or crowded
- Multiple overlapping subjects with unclear focus
- Heavily filtered or extremely low-resolution image
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