Hands-on: Lovart’s New Multi-Angle & Vectorize Tools for Designers

Intro
Lovart just quietly rolled out two "heavy hitter" features: Multi-Angle and Vectorize.
Whether you’re an ecommerce mockup veteran or just starting to create product visuals for your brand, you’ve hit the same “consistency wall" with AI. A single product shot is never enough—you need the hero view, side profile, top-down flat lay, and macro close-up. And in traditional AI tools, keeping your subject consistent across different camera angles has long been the mission impossible of prompting.
Lovart is trying to solve that, alongside the "pixel problem" of AI art. Here’s a look at how these tools actually work in a design workflow.
1. The Virtual Studio: 96 Angles, One Subject
Usually, an apparel mockup generator or a bottle renderer gives you one static view. If you want a side profile or a close-up, you’re often out of luck.
Lovart’s Multi-Angle feature transforms the typical AI product mockup generator experience into a virtual photography studio.
Image Mode: The Digital Sculpture
In this mode, your subject acts like a small 3D model. You can literally drag a control cube to rotate the view 360 degrees.
- The "Cinematic" Hack: There’s a one-click Wide Angle button. It takes a standard product shot and instantly adds spatial tension and depth, giving it that high-end movie poster feel.
Camera Mode: For the Photography Nerds
If you understand lens language, this is where it gets fun. You aren't moving the object; you’re moving the virtual camera rig.
- Horizontal Rotation: 8 directions (from 0° to 315°).
- Pitch/Tilt: 4 levels (from a -30° low-angle "hero shot" to a 60° bird’s-eye view).
- Distance: 3 options (Close-up, Medium, Wide).
With 96 possible combinations (8*4*3), you can generate a full set of e-commerce assets—side profiles, top-down views, and details—in seconds, all while keeping the lighting and details perfectly consistent.
2. Vectorize: Turning AI Pixels into Real Design Assets
We all know the limitation of AI: it produces bitmaps (PNG/JPG). They look great, but they’re "dead" pixels. You can’t scale them infinitely, and you definitely can’t edit paths in Illustrator or Figma. This makes AI images difficult to use for professional logos, icons, or print work.
Vectorize attempts to bridge that gap by converting those pixels into SVG files.
- The Workflow: You import the AI generation into a tool like Vectorpea online, and suddenly, you have clear anchor points and paths.
- Production-Ready: You can now tweak the nodes, change specific brand colors, or adjust the curves. It transforms an AI generation from a "concept" into a "deliverable asset" that you can actually hand over to a client or stretch across a billboard in Figma without losing a single pixel of quality.
3. The Reality Check: Is it Production-Ready?
These features tackle the two biggest pain points in the design workflow: Control and Editability. They aren't just "gimmicks" for making pretty pictures; they’re built for actual utility.
That said, it’s still an evolving tech. For example, the Vectorize tool currently doesn't support in-canvas editing; you still have to export it to a pro tool to move the nodes around. But for a productivity tool, the current version is more than enough to shave hours off a standard design sprint.
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