picchat.ai

picchat.ai

Your image creation studio

2 followers

picchat.ai is a fast, intuitive AI image creation and editing app for macOS. Generate portraits, product shots, thumbnails, and creative visuals with high-quality AI models. Edit, refine, outpaint, crop, and organize your work in a clean, lightweight desktop experience. Combine text prompts with your own reference photos, adjust styling, or rely on preset recipes to generate consistent, high-quality results. Use leading AI models from multiple providers and batch-generate new variations.
picchat.ai gallery image
picchat.ai gallery image
picchat.ai gallery image
picchat.ai gallery image
picchat.ai gallery image
Payment Required
Launch Team
Anima Playground
AI with an Eye for Design
Promoted

What do you think? …

Joe Nyaggah
Maker
📌
Hey Product Hunt 👋 I’m the maker of picchat.ai. Thanks for checking it out. The idea came from my own frustration with web-based AI image tools. They’re powerful, but they often feel slow, fragmented, and disposable. Generate an image, download it, upload it somewhere else, lose context, repeat. It didn’t feel like a creative tool, it felt like a form. I wanted something that felt more like a real desktop studio: fast, focused, and iterative. A place where generating, editing, masking, resizing, and refining images all happen in one continuous flow, without juggling tabs or re-prompting from scratch. That’s where Style Recipes came from. Instead of forcing people to become prompt engineers, I started encoding aesthetic intent (lighting, composition, realism, polish) into reusable presets. The goal was consistency and clarity, while still leaving room for control when you want it. As I built it, the process evolved toward making AI feel less “one-shot” and more conversational. Multi-turn edits, lightweight canvas tools, platform-specific resizing, and offline organization all came from trying to make the tool disappear and let the work stay front and center. This launch is an early but complete version of that vision. I’m especially curious how creators, founders, and designers here use it in their real workflows and what feels magical versus clunky. Happy to answer any questions, and genuinely grateful for any feedback