For Modest Fashion Brands

Your whole modest catalog, on Khaleeji models, in 60 seconds each.

Abayas, modest dresses, kaftans, two-piece sets, hijab styling — one tool for the whole rail. Upload a flat-lay, pick a model, pick a scene, get a covered-by-default on-model photo your buyer recognises. No shoot, no studio, no model fee.

The math on shoots for a modest brand

A modest label rarely sells one thing. A typical drop is a mix — 4 abayas, 6 modest dresses, 3 kaftans, 2 two-piece sets, a few hijab shades to pair. Call it 15–20 SKUs a month. A small shoot in Kuwait runs KWD 80–150 for a half-day with one model, and you cannot fit a 20-piece mixed rail into a half-day. So it becomes two shoots, or a longer booking, or KWD 250–400 a month just to photograph the catalog — before retakes, before the model is unavailable, before a kaftan colour reads wrong under studio light.

So most modest sellers shoot the abayas and leave the dresses, kaftans, and two-pieces as flat-lays on a hanger. Half the catalog gets a body, half doesn't. The buyer can't see how the kaftan falls, can't picture the two-piece on, and the conversion gap shows up exactly on the pieces you didn't shoot.

modelah.ai closes that gap for the whole rail at one price. One credit, one on-model photo, under a minute — abaya or dress or kaftan, same flow, same Khaleeji model your customer recognises.

Why a Khaleeji model matters across modest categories

Global AI fashion tools — Lalaland, Botika, Pebblely — run Western model rosters and treat modesty as a setting you fight the prompt to keep. A buyer in Riyadh looking at your kaftan on a blonde model in a Parisian studio feels the gap before she can name it. The piece is right; the styling, the cut, the whole context is off.

modelah.ai ships 12 Khaleeji AI models, 2 per GCC country, hijabi and non-hijabi, with hijab-colour customisation. For a multi-category modest brand that matters twice over: the same Layla or Dalal (Kuwait), Dana or Joud (Saudi Arabia), or Noura or Shamma (UAE) can carry your abaya, your modest dress, and your kaftan — so a customer scrolling your grid sees one recognisable face across the whole range, the way a real model contract would give you, without the contract.

What modelah.ai handles for modest fashion, specifically

Modesty by default, not by prompt. Scenes render fully covered standing and seated poses out of the box. When a source upload is a closeup or unclear, the model renders as a single closed piece — never an open front or an accidental two-piece. You don't fight the tool to keep coverage; coverage is the floor. Global tools make you prompt your way back to modest, and still drift.

One face across mixed categories. Pick a model once and run her across abayas, dresses, kaftans, and two-pieces. Consistent identity is what turns a mixed rail into a brand instead of a folder of unrelated photos.

Hijab-colour customisation. Match the hijab to the piece, generation by generation — a neutral shade for the work dress, a tone that lifts the embroidery on the occasion kaftan. Pick from each model's curated palette, or supply a reference if your collection has a signature shade. No global competitor lets you style the cover this precisely.

The zwara scene. An indoor Gulf gathering setting, built for modest lifestyle photography in a place your buyer actually wears the piece. Studio sells the catalog card; zwara sells the occasion dress and the kaftan. No Western tool ships a zwara — they ship a loft and a sidewalk.

Hyper-Realism + optional face blur. Natural skin pores, editorial lighting, real fabric texture so chiffon reads as chiffon and crepe as crepe — on by default. Add the optional face/eye blur when you want the piece, not the face, to be the focus.

Multi-pose set + 6-second video. From any finished image, generate a 5-pose set (5 credits, ZIP download) for a full product page, or spin a 6-second runway-style video for Reels — same garment, same model, motion content without a videographer.

Workflow for a multi-category modest store

1. Shoot the rail flat once. Lay each piece — abaya, dress, kaftan, two-piece — on a clean surface or mannequin, plain background, even light. Phone camera is fine. Compress each under 5 MB before upload.

2. Lock one model for the drop. Pick the model that matches your buyer base — if most orders ship to Riyadh, lead with Dana or Joud; if your account leans Kuwaiti, Layla or Dalal. Use her across every category so the drop looks like one collection.

3. Match the scene to the piece, not the brand. Studio for clean catalog cards across all categories, zwara for occasion kaftans and dresses, mall for premium positioning, work for the modest workwear pieces.

4. Generate piece by piece. ~30–50 seconds each. Like or dislike to steer your re-rolls — up to 3 attempts per credit if the first read isn't right.

5. Upgrade the hero pieces to a pose set. Your bestseller dress and your statement kaftan each deserve front, three-quarter, walking, seated, and detail. One credit becomes 5 poses, so the product page is full without a second upload.

Pricing in plain numbers

A Starter pack is $5 (KWD 1.5) for 10 credits — enough to put 10 mixed pieces on a model, or run a couple of pose sets on your hero SKUs. A Standard pack is $18 (KWD 5.5) for 50 + 5 bonus credits — the right size for a 15–20 SKU monthly drop with pose sets on the bestsellers and a video or two for Reels.

Compare that to KWD 250+ to shoot a mixed 20-piece rail across two sessions. The math is not close.

Credits never expire, so a slow month rolls into the next drop. 5 free on signup. No card needed to start.

Frequently asked

My catalog spans abayas, dresses, kaftans, and two-pieces. Does one model work across all of them?

Yes — that's the point. The 12 models are stable identities. Pick Dana once and she carries your abaya, your modest dress, your kaftan, and your two-piece set, so your grid reads as one collection. The flow is identical per category; you're not learning a different tool for each garment type.

Will the two-piece and open-style pieces stay modest, or do I have to fight the prompt?

Coverage is the default, not a setting you chase. Scenes render fully covered poses, and when an upload is a closeup or ambiguous the model renders as a single closed piece rather than guessing an open front. If you're intentionally showing a layered two-piece set, your flat-lay is the source of truth and the cut transfers through. You're never prompting your way back to modest the way global tools force you to.

Can the hijab colour change per piece so it matches each garment?

Yes. Hijab colour is set per generation — a neutral for the work dress, a shade that lifts the embroidery on an occasion kaftan. Pick from each model's curated palette, or supply a reference if your line has a signature colour. You can keep one face and still re-style the cover for every piece.

Which scene should I use for occasion wear versus everyday modest pieces?

Studio for clean catalog cards across the whole rail. The zwara (indoor Gulf gathering) scene is built for occasion kaftans and dresses — it shows the piece where your buyer actually wears it. Use mall for premium positioning and work for modest workwear. No global tool ships a zwara scene, which is exactly why occasion pieces read flat on those platforms.

I sell on Salla and Instagram, not a big platform. Is this built for me?

Especially. A multi-category seller on Salla or Instagram is the core user. A pose set gives a Salla product page front, three-quarter, walking, seated, and detail from one credit, and a 6-second video gives you Reels content for a hero kaftan — no shoot to schedule, no videographer, no waiting a week between drop and post.

Start with 5 free credits

Abayas, modest dresses, kaftans, two-piece sets, hijab styling — one tool for the whole rail. Upload a flat-lay, pick a model, pick a scene, get a covered-by-default on-model photo your buyer recognises. No shoot, no studio, no model fee.

@modelah.ai