A few longer
answers.
The shorter version sits on the homepage. The fuller version sits here, for the reader who would like to know exactly what kind of object this is before they begin.
What happens to my photograph after I upload it?
Your photograph is resized in your browser to a 1600-pixel JPEG before it ever leaves your device. The bytes are sent to the system only long enough to compose the reading. Within twenty-four hours every copy of the original photograph is erased from our infrastructure.
The photograph is never used to train models, never published in a gallery without your explicit consent, and never seen by anyone outside the system. The reading is what we keep — the photograph is the sitting, not the work.
Where does the reading actually live?
The text of the reading is stored privately against your code, retrievable only by the person holding it. The projected portrait, the wardrobe, the signature photograph, and the other composed images are stored alongside the text — never the bare original.
If you choose to publish the reading as a shareable page, the storage moves to a public URL keyed by a random identifier. Even then, the bare photograph is opt-in.
Is the reading actually personalised, or am I receiving a template?
Every line in the dossier is composed from your photograph specifically. The archetype name, the moniker the reading uses for you, the perception language, the wardrobe direction, the hairstyle blueprint, the protocol — all of it is written for the face the model sees.
Two readers receiving the same archetype name still receive different prose, different palettes, different feature reads, and different cinematic moniker titles. The Atlas you receive is shown to no other reader.
Will the reading make me feel worse about myself?
The Atlas opens with what is already working — the feature carrying you. Refinements are named second, and named editorially: as choices a stylist or photographer would offer, not as deficits a clinician would correct.
Procedures are never recommended by the model. The whole editorial brief is recognition, not verdict. You should close the reading standing slightly taller than you opened it. If that's not the experience you have, write to support and tell us — we want to know.
Why does this feel different from a face-analysis app?
Other tools explain anatomy: ratios, percentile bands, deficit lists. Vaesyn reads how a face is experienced — the perception it gives a room, the archetype world it already inhabits, the smallest move that resolves the read.
The category we built for is editorial identity intelligence, not aesthetic scoring. The work is closer to what a creative director, a stylist, or a portrait photographer does in their head when they look at someone — named in language, set in editorial pacing.
What does the full Atlas contain?
The projected portrait, the archetype rendered as a world (environments, fabrics, materials, scents, lighting, photography style), the feature reads with per-feature perception language, the social read (current and projected), the skin signature, the wardrobe direction, the hairstyle blueprint, the beard architecture where applicable, the signature photograph spec, the protocol arc across tonight / this week / this month / this year, and the closing letter from the Atelier.
It arrives as a private dossier, composed once, kept permanently.
Does Vaesyn recommend surgery?
No. The model never recommends procedures. Structural refinement is named only as non-surgical work — hair, brow, posture, light, skincare, wardrobe, expression. The Atlas is not a treatment plan.
If a procedural question is meaningful for your face, the right room for that conversation is a board-certified clinician's — not this page.
What if I'm not satisfied with the Atlas?
The Atlas is refundable for fourteen days. Write to support@vaesyn.com and the refund is processed the same business day, no exit survey, no conversation required.
Who is behind Vaesyn?
Vaesyn is held by a small editorial studio in Brooklyn. The reading is composed in the working sensibility of a stylist, a photographer, and a creative director — a perceptual register, not a clinical one. The work itself is the signature; the names belong somewhere later.
Anything still unanswered? Write to support@vaesyn.com.