Free • No signup Add Shirtless man to kitchen photo · Free

Add a Shirtless Man to a Kitchen Photo

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Upload a kitchen photo, describe who you want added, and the AI inserts them so naturally it looks like they belong there. Send to your partner with no context and enjoy the chaos.

Empty modern kitchen with white cabinets and clear countertops in natural light Same kitchen with a casual shirtless man in pajama pants eating cereal at the counter

Upload photo to add shirtless man to kitchen photo

"Add a middle-aged man in a bathrobe and slippers standing at the kitchen counter making coffee with complete comfort and familiarity. He should look like this is his morning routine, totally relaxed, maybe glancing out the window."

Release to upload

1 free edit·then from $4.99

Popular use cases:
  • shirtless man kitchen prank photo
  • stranger in kitchen photo prank
  • AI add person to room photo
  • fake intruder kitchen photo
  • who is this man prank
  • jealousy prank photo idea
  • add stranger to house photo
  • random man in my kitchen prank

Cost
Free No signup required
Time
Instant results in 15-30 seconds
Works on
Any device - browser, phone, tablet, desktop
Powered by
AI-powered photo editing
Scenario Prompt Time
Cereal box guy Scruffy shirtless man in pajama pants eating cereal from the box at the counter, completely at home 30s
Bathrobe coffee Middle-aged man in bathrobe making coffee at the counter, totally relaxed, morning routine energy 30s
Fridge raider Shirtless man with the fridge door open, holding leftovers, deep familiarity with the contents 30s
Kitchen table settler Man sitting at kitchen table with finished breakfast plate, reading his phone, completely settled in 30s

How it works

  1. Upload your photo

    Upload a photo of your kitchen or any room in your home. A wide shot showing open floor space works best — the AI needs somewhere natural to place the person. Good even lighting helps the added figure blend seamlessly into the scene.

    Expect: Upload takes under 5 seconds. Kitchen photos with clear counter space or floor area give the AI the best result.
  2. Describe the person

    Type exactly who you want added and what they're doing. Be vivid and specific — their look (scruffy, fit, middle-aged), what they're wearing (pajama pants, no shirt, socks), what they're doing (eating cereal, making coffee, staring at the fridge), and their energy (completely at home, unbothered). The more personality, the funnier and more convincing the result.

    Tip: The funniest and most convincing version is someone doing a totally mundane activity with complete confidence — like eating cereal while scrolling their phone, or just standing at the counter with a coffee mug looking like they've been there for years. Casual is scarier than threatening.

    Copy one of these to get started:

    Cereal man — the classic Add a scruffy shirtless man in gray pajama pants standing at the kitchen counter eating cereal directly from the box, looking completely at home. He should look casual and unbothered, like he's been living here for years.
    Bathrobe coffee guy Add a middle-aged man in a bathrobe and slippers standing at the kitchen counter making coffee with complete comfort and familiarity. He should look like this is his morning routine, totally relaxed, maybe glancing out the window.
    Leftovers raider Add a shirtless man standing with the refrigerator door open, holding a container of leftovers and looking at the contents with deep familiarity, like he's been going through this fridge for months.
    Already done with breakfast Add a tall shirtless man sitting at the kitchen table reading a newspaper (or looking at a phone), a finished breakfast plate in front of him, completely settled in like he owns the place.
    3 more prompts
    The cooking one Add a shirtless man in an apron (and only an apron) standing at the stove actively cooking something on the stovetop, completely absorbed in what he's making, like he cooks here every Sunday.
    The ambiguous one Add a fit shirtless man in boxer shorts leaning against the kitchen counter holding a mug, looking at something off-camera with a relaxed smile. He should look exactly like someone who's been staying over.
    Coworker energy Add a man in work clothes (button-down shirt, dress pants) sitting at the kitchen table with a laptop open and papers spread out, like he's taken over the kitchen as his work-from-home office.
  3. Send it

    Download the edited photo and send it to your partner or roommate with zero context, or go with "came home early, can you explain this" with the photo. Let them respond before you reveal anything. The longer the pause before they answer, the better the reaction.

See it in action

Empty modern kitchen with white cabinets and clear countertops in natural light
Before
->
Same kitchen with a casual shirtless man in pajama pants eating cereal at the counter
After

Cereal man — full commitment

Clean kitchen photo with a scruffy shirtless man eating cereal from the box added. Sent to a partner with "came home early" as the message. Full response in 90 seconds.

Prompt: Add a scruffy shirtless man in gray pajama pants standing at the kitchen counter eating cereal directly from the box, completely at home and unbothered.
Small apartment kitchen with coffee maker, morning light, no people
Before
->
Same kitchen with a relaxed middle-aged man in a bathrobe making coffee
After

Bathrobe coffee routine

Kitchen photo with a middle-aged man in a bathrobe making coffee added. Sent as "who is this person" from an anonymous number to a roommate.

Prompt: Add a middle-aged man in a bathrobe and slippers at the kitchen counter making coffee, completely relaxed and at home, like it's his morning routine.

If something looks off

The person looks photoshopped in — lighting doesn't match

Why: If the kitchen photo has strong directional lighting (harsh shadows from one side), the AI may add the person with different shadow angles.

Try: Add the person so the lighting on them matches the kitchen — same light direction, same shadow depth, same warmth as the room lighting.

Tip: Photos taken in even natural light (overcast day, or multiple windows) are easiest for the AI to match. Avoid kitchens with one harsh overhead light creating dramatic shadows.

The person is too large or too small for the space

Why: Scale is one of the trickiest things to get right — the AI has to infer the physical size of the kitchen from a flat image.

Try: Make the person a realistic human height relative to the kitchen — they should look like a normal adult standing in a normal kitchen, properly scaled to the cabinets and appliances.

Tip: Including a recognizable height reference in the photo (like standard kitchen counters at 36 inches) helps the AI scale the person correctly.

The person looks blurry or oddly rendered

Why: Adding people to scenes is one of the more complex AI edits — if the kitchen photo has low resolution or complex geometry, results vary.

Try: Render the person with clear, sharp detail — they should look as real and sharp as the kitchen itself, with clean edges and realistic body proportions.

Tip: Use the highest resolution kitchen photo you have. Better source image quality consistently produces better person additions.

The person's face looks wrong or unclear

Why: AI-generated human faces can be inconsistent, especially at certain angles or distances.

Try: Make the person's face look like a realistic, natural human face — normal proportions, natural expression, no distortions.

Tip: If the face detail is the issue, try asking for the person to be turned slightly sideways or looking away — profile angles are sometimes rendered more naturally than straight-on faces.

The person is doing the wrong activity

Why: Vague activity descriptions leave room for interpretation.

Try: The person should specifically be [exact activity] — standing at the counter eating cereal from the box, holding the box with one hand, spoon in the other.

Tip: Be precise about the physical action: what their hands are doing, where they're looking, and exactly where they're standing. The more specific, the more the AI delivers what you want.

Quick answers

Do I need to mark where the person should stand in the photo?

No. Just describe what the person is doing and where in the kitchen they are — "at the counter," "by the stove," "at the kitchen table" — and the AI places them there.

Is this free?

Yes. EditThisPic gives you 1 free edit per week with no account needed. For more edits, credits start at $1.99. No subscription required.

Will this look realistic enough to fool someone?

In a well-lit kitchen photo, a person addition can be convincing enough for a text prank, especially at phone screen size. The key is making the person's activity feel mundane and domestic — casual is more convincing than dramatic. Your target will be so focused on processing who the person is that they won't immediately scrutinize whether the photo is edited.

Can I add anyone I want, not just a shirtless man?

Yes. Describe whatever person you want — a woman in scrubs, an elderly man in a cardigan, a guy in a business suit making toast. The tool works from your description. The shirtless-man-in-kitchen version is just particularly effective for the jealousy prank angle.

What makes this prank work best?

Two things: the person doing something mundane and domestic (not dramatic or threatening), and sending it with minimal context. "Came home early" or just the photo alone works better than an elaborate setup. The goal is making your target fill in the story themselves before you say anything.

Can I add someone to rooms other than the kitchen?

Yes. Any interior room photo works — living room, bedroom, home office. The kitchen version is particularly good because it implies familiarity with your home (they know where you keep the cereal). But the same technique works for finding a stranger watching TV on your couch, sleeping in your guest room, or working from your office.

Does EditThisPic store my photos?

Photos are processed to generate your edit and not stored beyond the session. No account means no personal data collected by default.

How is this different from other photo editing tools?

Most photo editors require sourcing a separate photo of a person and manually compositing it — cutting out backgrounds, matching lighting, scaling. EditThisPic generates the person directly into your scene from a natural language description. You don't need a source image of anyone.

How much does EditThisPic cost?

You get 1 free edit per week — no account needed. After that, credit packs start at $1.99 for 3 edits. Monthly plans start at $4.99/mo for 15 edits with unused credits rolling over. All edits are full resolution with no watermark.

Ready to add a stranger to your kitchen?

Free to try. No signup required.

1 free edit included·Credit packs from $4.99