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Krea 2 Identity Edit

Updated: Jul 9, 2026

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3 variants available

Type

LoRA

Stats

343

Reviews

Published

Jul 9, 2026

Base Model

Krea 2

Hash

AutoV2
89FE1EBDC6
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Followers - 28

28

Likes - 139

139

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Krea 2 Identity Edit


## v1.1 — recommended

**What's better:**

- Substantially improved **face likeness** and image fidelity

- Much stronger **edit locality** — camera, pose, and untouched elements stay fixed far more reliably

- Better **two-person identity separation**

- More reliable object **remove / replace**

- Better compound **outfit-change** compliance

- Corrected reference geometry handling

**Honest notes:**

- Person-replacement ("replace the woman with an orangutan") is currently weaker than v1 — keep v1 around for that use case until v1.2

- No high-res adaptation pass yet: at high resolutions (especially two-person edits) identities can bleed — prefer ~1–1.5MP and upscale

- If you get duplicated/split compositions, **lower grounding_px** (v1.1 trained range: 384–768)

**Settings:** Turbo, 8–12 steps (8 = composition, 12 = face detail, ~10 balanced), CFG 1.0, LoRA strength 1.0. Removals/deletions: Raw model, CFG 3, ~20 steps. Match output aspect ratio to the source. Two-ref edits: **scene = image 1, person = image 2.**

Requires the [ComfyUI-Krea2Edit nodes](https://github.com/lbouaraba/comfyui-krea2edit) — see [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/lbouaraba/comfyui-krea2edit/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md).

Instruction-based, identity-preserving image editing for Krea 2 (12.9B single-stream MMDiT). Give it an image and a plain-language instruction; it edits while preserving what you didn't ask to change — including the person.

An unofficial community fine-tune of Krea 2 Raw. Not an official Krea product; not affiliated with or endorsed by Krea.ai, Inc.

Requires the ComfyUI-Krea2Edit node pack — the LoRA is trained with dual conditioning (in-context VAE tokens + image-grounded Qwen3-VL encoding) that stock nodes don't provide. Two ready-made workflows ship with it.

What it does

  • Person re-staging with likeness: "create a photo of this person at a night market" — same face, same outfit down to individual moles and marks, fully relit to the new scene. New camera angles and poses included.

  • Local edits: recolor, add/remove/replace objects, attribute and outfit changes, with near-pixel preservation of the rest of the frame.

  • Replace-with-reference: "replace the woman with a big orangutan" — the replace verb is trained, locality holds.

  • Full-image restyles: global style with preserved composition.

  • Two-input edits (experimental): scene + person as separate references. Outfits and placement work well; see limitations for faces.

  • Composes with your LoRAs: character/body/style LoRAs stack on top and steer the prior — something closed editors structurally can't offer.

Task type Model Steps CFG Most edits (add, recolor, restyle, re-stage) Turbo 8 1.0 Removals / large deletions Raw 20 3.0

  • Match the output aspect ratio to the source image. Training pairs are same-size; AR mismatch degrades preservation (edits may apply to only part of the frame).

  • Generate at ≤2MP. Above that, source content can bleed or subjects duplicate (training was 768/1024-class).

  • grounding_px is a real dial (trained range 512–1536): lower values = stronger edit adherence and more uniform scene changes; higher values = stronger identity/likeness. 768 is a balanced default; try 1024+ for people.

  • At CFG > 1, ground the negative too (empty prompt + same image).

  • LoRA strength 1.0.

Known limitations (honest list)

  • Likeness is texture-faithful, proportion-conservative. Moles, skin character, hair, and lighting adapt beautifully; strongly distinctive facial geometry (unusual nose, eye spacing, face length) regresses toward typical proportions. People whose identity lives in texture and structure transfer best; geometry-defined faces read as a "close relative."

  • Two-person inputs keep outfits distinct but faces drift toward each other. Workaround that works today: chain single-ref inserts (place person A, then a second edit pass adding person B from their reference).

  • Removal works but is not yet reliable — always use the Raw/CFG 3 recipe; expect occasional re-renders instead of deletions.

  • Outfit swaps are hit-or-miss — changing what a person wears sometimes works cleanly and sometimes doesn't apply; reroll or rephrase.

  • Local edits aren't always perfectly local — add/remove/replace operations can sometimes alter other parts of the frame or shift the overall color grade. If preservation matters, compare against the source and reroll.

  • Highly unusual visual content (extravagant hairstyles, extreme body types) can drift toward the base prior — a subject LoRA stacked on top fixes this.

License

The LoRA weights are a Derivative Model of Krea 2 and are distributed under the Krea 2 Community License Agreement (see also NOTICE). Key points for users: commercial use is permitted under the license's revenue threshold (§2.3, currently <$1M/yr — above that, contact Krea for an enterprise license); deployments must implement reasonable content moderation (§4.2); AI disclosure obligations apply where required (§4.3). This repository modifies the Krea Model as permitted by §3; it is not endorsed by Krea.

Research/portfolio release by a self-funded hobbyist.

Showcase

All reference people below are themselves AI-generated — no real likenesses. Prompts are embedded in each image.