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jodij28273193
Inspiring
June 7, 2026
Question

I am now totally frustrated!!! I work hours on my own images AI. and they keep getting rejected for similar

  • June 7, 2026
  • 7 replies
  • 127 views

I am now totally frustrated!!! I work hours on my own images with AI, and they keep getting rejected for similarities. I put each image into TinEye, and they always return 0. Not only that, but I don’t spam the system. Furthermore, I might put up six photos a week. 

All were rejected, not for problems but because they had too many. They should let clients decide which picture they want if there is nothing wrong with it. And what photographer they would like to work with,  I spent credits on these. Time on these, I am getting so frustrated. Kitchens and bedrooms sell really well. I don't want to create wild, crazy stuff that is just going to sit in my portfolio. How do I handle this frustration? What is the marketing strategy behind this? Can someone help me with my frustration? And all the money I spent generating these images. The small images are just to show you what they turn down, not to critique. I'm really not looking for a critique on these images. They just turned them down because there were too many. And like I said, as of TinEye, it showed zero images that looked like this.  

    7 replies

    RALPH_L
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 8, 2026

    There are a lot of errors:
     

     

    Nancy OShea
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 8, 2026

    Trends come & go rather quickly which can date your content significantly. I mention this because the open cabinets & floating shelf concepts are passé.  Designers pivoted back to closed cabinets to hide clutter.

     

    Also, pot faucets were a sort-lived gadget that looked cool, but few people had much use for them. I have a magnetic knife strip on the wall which is much more functional than a pot faucet.

     

    Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
    jodij28273193
    Inspiring
    June 9, 2026

    That is funny; I am redoing my kitchen right now for 47,000, and we are using open shelving. It is a modern, high-end look. White kitchen, range hood, and open shelves on both sides, and I am getting a pot filler in a million-dollar house in Florida

    I’m not being smart. But none of them are out of style. I am a realtor as well. These pictures, maybe not perfect, according to Adobe, but they were accepted at 2 other agencies, I guess, for concept or close enough to sell.

    Jill_C
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 7, 2026

    You must zoom in and inspect each image carefully. In the first one, the faucet handles are mismatched, the woven backs on the counter stools are inconsistent, the white bowl on the shelf to the left of the window is transparent… there are other inconsistencies, but I stopped looking after this image.

    Jill C., Forum Volunteer
    Nancy OShea
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 7, 2026

    It’s not hard to understand why you’re getting refusals for “similar content.” You’re competing with over 28 million kitchens in Stock inventory.

    Why persist in this uphill battle?  

    https://stock.adobe.com/search?k=kitchen

     

    This reminds of the guy who ate spicy hot chicken wings until his mouth was on fire then complained about the pain. When something hurts, stop doing it, try something else.

     

    Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
    daniellei4510
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 7, 2026

    I know you didn’t ask for a critique, but I’m going to give one anyway, since you come across as someone who very much wants to succeed submitting to Adobe Stock. The issue isn’t that you’re spending a lot of money creating your assets, but that you aren’t spending enough. I took a square portion of your original image (on the left) and ran it through Gemini asking to have the quality and details improved. This is a screenshot taken at 300% and the improved version still holds up even at 300% magnification. So even had it bypassed the similarity issue, it would have be rejected for quality issues.

    There are dozens of other areas in the image needs similar attention right down to the plates and knobs on the stove but, as you’ve seen, Adobe feels they have enough images of kitchens. 

     

    Adobe Community Expert | If you aren't submitting your assets in sRGB, you probably didn't read the rules.
    jodij28273193
    Inspiring
    June 8, 2026

    Thank you. I blew the image up to 200% and thought it was clear. But after seeing yours, I see it isn’t.  Maybe it’s my 68-year-old eyes. I do want to succeed very much. Thanks again!

    daniellei4510
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 7, 2026

    tineye.com won’t help you. tineye looks for EXACT or at least nearly exact copies of the image uploaded. tiny is where one might look to see how their purchased images are being used and where.

    Instead, go to adobe.stock.com and drag your image into the window. I took your top image, dragged it into adobe.stock.com, and it found 19 and a half million similar images.

    Adobe Community Expert | If you aren't submitting your assets in sRGB, you probably didn't read the rules.
    jodij28273193
    Inspiring
    June 7, 2026

    How do you do that? I would like to do that too. Thanks

    daniellei4510
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 7, 2026

    Go to stock.adobe.com and drag your image into the browser window.

    Adobe Community Expert | If you aren't submitting your assets in sRGB, you probably didn't read the rules.
    Participant
    June 7, 2026

    I think we all have similar frustration. Take some time, and re-submit them later on. And then some might be accepted.

    RALPH_L
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 8, 2026

    First, as pointed out, the errors need to be corrected.