Collect your favorite things in real life. Point your camera and tap the shutter — Loot recognizes it, cuts it out, and sorts it into the right collection. Then share with friends.
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The cutout is surprisingly clean on textured surfaces, and tossing items into collections feels like a game I actually want to keep playing.
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the cutout work looks genuinely clean from the demo, not that mushy halo mess most camera apps still ship with
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the cut-out on first capture looks surprisingly clean, and i love that it already drops into the right collection without a second tap. nice execution.
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Tried it with my coffee mug and a weird figurine on my desk — both got snipped out cleanly without me fiddling with the edges. The auto-sorting into collections is the kind of thing I didn't know I wanted.
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The cutout quality is genuinely impressive, way cleaner than I expected from a phone snap. Sorting it into the right collection automatically felt like magic the first few times.
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Does the recognition work on messy backgrounds or do I need a clean shot for it to actually cut things out properly?
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the auto cutout works way better than I expected, even on cluttered backgrounds. Wish I had this when I was scrapbooking as a kid
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Tried it on a stack of vinyls and it actually pulled each album out cleanly, even the weirdo shaped ones. Wish the collection folders were a bit easier to rename but overall a fun little toy.
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Does the recognition actually work well on cluttered backgrounds, or do I need a pretty plain backdrop for it to cut things out cleanly?
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how well does the recognition actually work on cluttered backgrounds or weird angles, or is it really only ideal for clean product shots?
Replies
The cutout is surprisingly clean on textured surfaces, and tossing items into collections feels like a game I actually want to keep playing.
the cutout work looks genuinely clean from the demo, not that mushy halo mess most camera apps still ship with
the cut-out on first capture looks surprisingly clean, and i love that it already drops into the right collection without a second tap. nice execution.
Tried it with my coffee mug and a weird figurine on my desk — both got snipped out cleanly without me fiddling with the edges. The auto-sorting into collections is the kind of thing I didn't know I wanted.
The cutout quality is genuinely impressive, way cleaner than I expected from a phone snap. Sorting it into the right collection automatically felt like magic the first few times.
Does the recognition work on messy backgrounds or do I need a clean shot for it to actually cut things out properly?
the auto cutout works way better than I expected, even on cluttered backgrounds. Wish I had this when I was scrapbooking as a kid
Tried it on a stack of vinyls and it actually pulled each album out cleanly, even the weirdo shaped ones. Wish the collection folders were a bit easier to rename but overall a fun little toy.
Does the recognition actually work well on cluttered backgrounds, or do I need a pretty plain backdrop for it to cut things out cleanly?
how well does the recognition actually work on cluttered backgrounds or weird angles, or is it really only ideal for clean product shots?