Flux Ultra 1.1 vs Reve
Restaurant, cooking, and food styling content — see how these models compare with real AI-generated outputs.
Full comparisonCompare Models (select 4)
Choosing the right image model for food photography depends on what you produce most: hyper-real restaurant hero shots, step-by-step cooking visuals, or menu and promo graphics that must render text cleanly. Flux Ultra 1.1 and Reve both create high-quality food imagery in Influencer Studio, but they shine in different parts of the workflow.
Below is a practical comparison for restaurant marketing, recipe content, and food styling—covering photorealism, plating detail, ingredient fidelity, typography needs (menus, labels, signage), and cost per image (Flux Ultra 1.1: 16 credits vs Reve: 8 credits).
Food Photography — Side-by-Side Results
Prompt
"A casual influencer-style food photo: a woman in her mid-20s with shoulder-length wavy brown hair, minimal makeup, wearing an oversized gray hoodie, leaning over a small kitchen island and looking near the phone camera as if filming an IG story while holding a fork mid-bite. In front of her is a beautifully plated avocado toast with poached eggs, chili flakes, microgreens, and a side of citrus salad on a ceramic plate, shot at a dramatic 45-degree angle with linen napkin, matte cutlery, and scattered herbs as props. Bright natural window light, slight handheld smartphone feel, candid and everyday—like a real UGC breakfast post."
Feature Comparison
| Feature | Flux Ultra 1.1 | Reve |
|---|---|---|
| Provider | Black Forest Labs | Reve |
| Subcategories | text-to-image | text-to-image |
| 1080p / 2k Mode | Yes | Yes |
| 4k Mode | No | No |
| NSFW Rating | Strict | Medium |
| Aspect Ratio | 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, 3:4, 4:3, 21:9 | 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, 3:4, 4:3 |
| Starting Price | 16 credits | 8 credits |
Flux Ultra 1.1 Strengths
- Exceptional photorealism for “hero” dish shots (crisp textures, believable highlights, and depth of field)
- Stronger micro-detail for food styling: garnish edges, sauce gloss, crumb structure, steam and condensation effects
- More convincing restaurant-grade lighting setups (moody table scenes, window light, and controlled studio looks)
- Great for close-ups where ingredient realism matters (sear marks, emulsions, foam, flaky pastry layers)
- Premium output quality suited to high-end campaigns and large-format use
Reve Strengths
- Strong overall aesthetic for creative food concepts and stylized recipe/brand visuals
- More reliable text rendering for food photography adjacent assets (menu boards, packaging mockups, labels, signage)
- Cost-efficient at 8 credits per image, making it practical for rapid ideation and A/B testing
- Well-suited for social-first compositions (overlays, poster-like layouts, seasonal promos with typography)
- Good option when you need cohesive “vibe” rather than maximum photoreal micro-detail
Verdict
Pick Flux Ultra 1.1 when the image itself must sell the dish—high-end restaurant hero shots, tight plating close-ups, and premium-looking textures where realism is the priority. It costs more (16 credits/image), but it’s the better choice when fine detail and photoreal finish are non-negotiable.
Pick Reve when you’re producing a higher volume of food content or building menu/promo creatives that include readable text (8 credits/image). It’s a strong balance of style and practicality—especially for branded social assets, seasonal campaigns, and concepts that rely on typography or packaging-style elements.
Frequently Asked Questions
More Comparisons by Category
Try Both Models Free
Sign up and get credits to test Flux Ultra 1.1, Reve, and all our other AI models for food photography.
Join Influencer Studio Today
Start creating amazing AI-generated content for your brand

