Change only the parts you mask: fix faces, replace objects, or add details without touching the rest of the image. Ideal for targeted edits and compositing.
Flux Dev Inpainting: Mask-Based Editing in Pixio
Flux Dev Inpainting uses the same ref- and LoRA-friendly Flux Dev backbone but is tuned for mask-based editing: you paint a mask over the area you want to change, and the model regenerates only that region while keeping the rest of the image intact. Ideal for fixing faces, replacing objects, adding details, and compositing.
In this course you'll learn:
- What Flux Dev Inpainting is — how it relates to Flux Dev and when to choose inpainting over text-to-image or image-to-image.
- Using Flux Dev Inpainting in Pixio — where to find it in Pixio Generate, how to upload an image and draw a mask, and run your first inpaint.
- Mask-based editing workflow — drawing masks, prompt for the masked region only, and combining with refs/LoRAs when needed.
- Professional workflows — resolution, aspect ratio, blending, and when to pair with Flux Dev for full-image generation.
- Prompting for inpainting — what to describe (the new content), what to avoid, and example prompts for fixes and replacements.
- Best practices — when to use Flux Dev Inpainting vs Flux Dev vs Flux Pro Fill; limitations and next steps.
Complete the lessons below to master targeted, mask-based edits with Flux Dev Inpainting in Pixio.