Want your photo to look like a cinematic reveal? This torn-paper hole + double-exposure portrait style blends your face with dramatic scenery, textures, or neon visuals for a stunning artistic effect. It’s perfect for social media, prints, or even gifting a custom look to someone special.
No advanced editing skills needed — just your own photo and the same prompt we used here. Just copy and paste the full prompt so you can easily create this ultra-real, high-impact portrait for yourself today!
Turn Your Photo Into a Torn Paper Hole + Double-Exposure Portrait — Get the Prompt
Ultra-realistic 8K torn paper hole portrait (1080×1920 px, 9:16 aspect ratio) featuring your same face as the uploaded image, blended with a professional double-exposure collage style, created in Adobe Photoshop.
Use your own face as the central subject; match facial structure, skin tone, and hairstyle exactly like the uploaded image to keep identity consistent. No earrings or ear jewelry—ears clean and natural.
Design a large, irregular torn paper “hole” in the center of the canvas:
Outer area: matte, off-white paper with realistic torn edges, curled fibers, and subtle inner shadows to simulate a physical tear.
Inner hole: reveals your full-color portrait inside, as if your face is behind the paper.
Place your portrait layer behind the torn paper; position your eyes slightly above center in the hole for strong eye contact.
Outfit: modern, minimal, editorial—choose a clean, high-neck top in soft beige, charcoal, or pure white, with no logos or patterns. Fabric should look slightly textured (knit, ribbed, or matte crepe) to feel premium but not distract from the face.
Double-exposure twist inside the hole: softly blend an abstract cityscape, nature scene, or geometric shapes into the shadows of your hair and shoulders using Overlay/Screen blend modes and layer masks so your face stays clearly readable.
Convert the outer paper area (everything outside the hole) to rich black & white with a fine paper grain or subtle noise texture, while keeping the portrait inside the hole in warm, cinematic color grading (golden highlights, gentle contrast, teal shadows).
Add a soft drop shadow from the torn paper onto your face to create depth, as if the paper is hovering slightly above the portrait. Keep shadows realistic and soft-edged.
Background behind everything (if visible beyond the paper) should be a very dark, blurred gradient, so the paper and face remain the main focus.
Expression: professional, calm, slightly serious, with direct gaze into camera—ideal for portfolio, magazine cover, or high-end social media branding.
Finish with a subtle vignette and micro-contrast (clarity) on the face only to draw attention to the eyes and skin texture; avoid adding any text, logos, or watermarks so the result feels like pure gallery art.
