Free • No signup Fix Storefront photos in bad weather · Free

Fix storefront photos taken in bad weather

Rainy day photos make your business look closed or uninviting. Replace with sunny welcoming weather in 25 seconds.

Cafe storefront in heavy rain with puddles and dark sky
Before
Same cafe on sunny day looking open and welcoming
After

Storefront Photos Taken in Bad Weather? Fix to Sunny

Drop your photo here

or click to browse

Release to upload

Free • No signup

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Popular use cases:
  • Storefront photos bad weather
  • Fix rainy day photos
  • Replace weather in photos
  • Sunny storefront photos
  • Business location weather
  • Google My Business weather photos

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
Rainy to sunny replace rainy weather with sunny day, look welcoming 25s
Overcast to bright change gray overcast to bright sunny weather 20s
Remove wet surfaces replace rainy conditions with dry sunny day 25s
Snow to pleasant replace snowy weather with sunny pleasant day 25s

How it works

  1. Upload your bad weather photo

    Drop the storefront photo taken in rain, snow, overcast conditions, or any weather that makes your location look uninviting or closed. Common issue for businesses that needed photos urgently.

    Expect: Weather replacement: 20-30 seconds. Complex scenes with reflections: may need refinement.
  2. Describe the ideal weather

    Type 'replace rainy weather with sunny day conditions' or 'change gray overcast to bright sunny welcoming weather.' Be specific about the target conditions. The AI understands business context—'make it look open and inviting' or 'sunny day like mid-afternoon summer.'

    Tip: Specify time of day for natural results: 'bright morning light' or 'warm afternoon sun.'

    Copy one of these to get started:

    Rainy day making storefront look closed replace rainy weather with sunny day conditions, make it look open and welcoming
    Gray overcast day looking dreary change gray overcast to bright sunny weather, enhance lighting to look inviting
    Wet pavement and puddles visible replace rainy conditions with dry sunny day, remove wet surfaces and puddles
    Winter snow making location look cold replace snowy weather with sunny pleasant day, make it look warm and inviting
    2 more prompts
    Evening photo too dark change to bright daytime lighting, make it look like midday sunny conditions
    Fog or haze reducing visibility remove fog and haze, create clear sunny day with good visibility
  3. Review for welcoming appearance

    Check that sky looks naturally sunny. Verify lighting on building looks consistent with sunny conditions. Ensure overall feel is 'open and welcoming' not 'closed or dreary.' Weather directly impacts perceived availability.

  4. Refine if needed

    If lighting needs adjustment or weather elements (puddles, wet surfaces) remain, describe specific fixes and regenerate. Most weather fixes work on first try.

    Tip: Update Google My Business immediately—sunny photos dramatically increase 'direction' and 'call' actions.
Try it free

Storefront Photos Taken in Bad Weather? Fix to Sunny

Drop your photo here

or click to browse

Release to upload

Free • No signup

"Only had rainy day photos of our new location—looked closed and dreary on Google. Changed to sunny in 30 seconds. Foot traffic visibly increased that week." @CafeOwner

See it in action

Cafe storefront in heavy rain with puddles and dark sky
Before
->
Same cafe on sunny day looking open and welcoming
After

Cafe photographed during rainstorm

New cafe only had photos from rainy opening day. Google My Business showed dark storefront with visible rain and puddles. Customers thought they were closed. Changed to sunny—visits doubled.

Prompt: replace rainy weather with sunny day conditions, make it look open and welcoming
Retail store under gray overcast sky looking dim and closed
Before
->
Bright sunny version looking vibrant and open for business
After

Retail store on gray overcast day

Retail location photo taken during overcast weather—looked dim, closed, and uninviting. Low Google My Business engagement. Changed to bright sunny—'direction' clicks increased 40%.

Prompt: change gray overcast to bright sunny weather, enhance lighting to look inviting
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If something looks off

Lighting on building doesn't match sunny sky

Why: The AI changed the sky but didn't adjust building lighting to match sunny conditions.

Try: replace weather with sunny day AND enhance building lighting to match sunny conditions

Tip: Combine sky change with lighting adjustment in one prompt for consistent results.

Wet surfaces or puddles still visible

Why: Weather change focused on sky, not ground-level wet elements.

Try: replace rainy weather AND remove all wet surfaces, puddles, and water reflections

Tip: Specify both sky and ground conditions: 'dry sunny day' covers both.

New weather looks fake or obviously edited

Why: Dramatic weather changes can look unnatural if lighting doesn't match throughout.

Try: create naturally sunny conditions, match lighting consistently across entire scene

Tip: Add 'natural' or 'realistic' to prevent over-processed Instagram filter appearance.

Rain reflections in windows remain

Why: Window reflections are complex and may not have been included in weather change.

Try: replace rainy weather including window reflections, make windows reflect sunny day

Tip: Tap markers on windows if reflections need specific attention.

AI changed the wrong part of the photo

Why: Complex scenes with both indoor/outdoor visible may have caused ambiguous targeting.

Try: Tap markers on the outdoor area to change, then: replace only outdoor weather, keep indoor unchanged

Tip: For photos showing both inside and outside, specify which area needs weather change.

Quick answers

Do I need to mark areas before describing the weather change?

No! Just describe the change: 'replace rainy weather with sunny day' or 'change overcast to bright sun.' The AI understands weather context. Only use markers if you need to specify outdoor areas vs reflections in windows, or other complex distinctions.

Why does weather in photos matter for business?

Customers subconsciously judge 'open vs closed' by weather. Rainy, dark, or overcast photos signal 'closed' or 'uninviting' even when your hours say open. Sunny photos signal 'welcoming' and 'open for business.' Google My Business data shows sunny storefront photos get significantly more 'direction' clicks and calls. Weather affects perceived availability and appeal.

Can I use weather-edited photos on Google My Business?

Yes, with reasonable representation. Changing rainy to sunny doesn't misrepresent your actual location—it shows how it looks on a good day. Don't create false expectations (adding beach when you're landlocked, tropical setting when you're in Alaska). The goal is showing your location at its welcoming best, which happens on sunny days.

Will the weather change look realistic?

Yes, if you include lighting adjustments. The AI not only changes the sky but adjusts how light falls on your building. For best results, specify 'sunny day with natural lighting' rather than just 'change sky.' Lighting consistency throughout the scene makes weather changes look natural and believable.

Should I wait for good weather or fix photos digitally?

Fix digitally. Waiting for perfect weather delays your marketing by weeks or months. Digital weather fixes are immediate and you can update photos while keeping your location open. For seasonal businesses, this is especially valuable—you can show sunny summer appearance even when photographing in winter. Update when you actually reshoot, but don't let bad weather photos hurt business in the meantime.

Ready to fix your bad weather storefront photos?

Free to try. No signup required.

Try it free