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Build A Korean Skincare Minimalism Instagram Account With An AI Character: A Step By Step Guide

FLB Studio

May 12, 20267 min read

Build A Korean Skincare Minimalism Instagram Account With An AI Character: A Step By Step Guide

This guide shows how to build an Instagram account focused on minimal Korean skincare routines using Flying Bears Talent. The face is one recurring AI character; the content is short three-step routines, ingredient explainers, and product flat lays. The example character is Yuna, a young Korean woman with a soft, fresh-faced look, no heavy makeup, and hair tied back. By the end of the guide you will have Yuna locked in, a wardrobe and bathroom location set, a first routine post with a real product as the anchor, and a weekly batching cadence that covers three to four posts in one session. You need a laptop, label-forward photos of three or four real skincare bottles, and roughly ninety minutes for the first run.

Step 1: Create the character. Open the new character form and enter the traits. For Yuna: name "Yuna", early twenties, Korean heritage, vibe "fresh, soft, unhurried", style "white linen robe, simple cotton tank tops, soft pastel knits, hair tied back, minimal jewellery". Add a note in the description that natural skin texture matters more than airbrushed perfection; pores and faint freckles read as trustworthy on a skincare feed, glass-doll skin reads as AI. Save, then generate the four additional canonical poses. Check each pose: skin texture believable (some texture, not plastic), hair styling consistent, age range steady. Regenerate any pose where the skin renders overly smoothed. The reasoning behind keeping a single locked identity is on the Flying Bears Talent.AI landing page.

A young Korean woman with hair tied back in a white linen robe, soft natural skin texture, calm fresh-faced look, even morning light, neutral background
A young Korean woman with hair tied back in a white linen robe, soft natural skin texture, calm fresh-faced look, even morning light, neutral background

Step 2: Build the wardrobe and lock the location. In the wardrobe section, upload one photo per piece and tag the category. Start with five items: a white linen robe (full outfit, signature), two cotton tank tops (top, white and oatmeal), a soft blush-pink knit (top), and simple denim (bottom). For the location, use the location input in describe mode: "a bright bathroom with white subway tile, a clean wooden shelf with a row of skincare bottles, a small ceramic dish, a folded white towel, morning light through a frosted window, no clutter". If you have a reference photo of a bathroom you admire (with rights to use), upload it in upload mode. Enable grounding so the model pulls real-world bathroom references for realistic light and tile.

Step 3: Generate the first routine post with a real product. Open the new post form. Attach Yuna, select the white linen robe, and upload a product image: a label-forward photo of an actual skincare bottle you use (cleanser, toner, or moisturiser, the full bottle, label facing camera). The product image is what the model anchors on, so use the real bottle, not a press shot. Scene description: "Yuna stands by the bathroom shelf holding the bottle at chest height, label forward, soft morning light from the window, white tile and wooden shelf visible behind her". Camera angle: medium shot. Lighting: natural. Composition: rule of thirds. Aspect ratio: 4:5 for Instagram. Generate, then review: label legible, skin texture natural, robe present, Yuna recognisable. Tighten the scene description and regenerate if anything drifts. Disclose any gifted or PR product clearly in the caption.

A young Korean woman with hair tied back in a white linen robe holds a labelled skincare bottle at chest height by a bright bathroom shelf with white subway tile, soft morning window light, natural composition
A young Korean woman with hair tied back in a white linen robe holds a labelled skincare bottle at chest height by a bright bathroom shelf with white subway tile, soft morning window light, natural composition

Step 4: Batch three post types in one session. Hold Yuna and the robe constant, then rotate three recurring frames per product. Frame one: product hold at the shelf (4:5, medium shot, label forward). Frame two: application action close-up (4:5, eye level, Yuna's fingers smoothing product on her cheek, shallow depth of field). Frame three: ingredient flat lay (the bottle on a wooden tray with a small ceramic dish and a folded towel, 1:1, top down, no character). Three products per week means nine images per batch, or drop to two frames per product if credits are tight. Before publishing, open the Instagram preview card on each post to confirm the crop and first caption line work as a thumbnail. For captions, write the three-step routine and one ingredient explainer yourself; use auto-caption only for the lifestyle framing. The supported aspect ratios and other generation parameters are listed on the FAQ page.

Step 5: Set a posting cadence and disclose honestly. A realistic weekly rhythm is three products: Monday (cleanser routine), Wednesday (toner or essence with an ingredient explainer), Friday (moisturiser or SPF). One batch session covers it. Only feature products you actually use, and disclose gifting or PR with a clear "gifted" tag at the top of the caption (FTC guidance applies in any market you reach, and trust is the only moat skincare creators have). Avoid medical claims; describe texture, scent, and skin feel, not "cures acne". When you are ready to add Reels of the application step or video ingredient breakdowns, our monthly plans and credit packs show which tier matches the throughput.

A flat lay of three Korean skincare bottles on a wooden tray with a small ceramic dish and a folded white towel, soft morning light, top down composition
A flat lay of three Korean skincare bottles on a wooden tray with a small ceramic dish and a folded white towel, soft morning light, top down composition

The pattern is small and repeatable: one character with one locked accessory (the white linen robe), one bright bathroom location, real labelled bottles as the product anchor, three recurring frames per product, batched weekly. Done consistently for a month, you will have twelve posts that look like they came from a real person using these products in a real bathroom, not a stock-shot rotation. The character does not change, the bathroom does not change, and the products are always real and disclosed. That is what separates a skincare account that builds trust from a feed of glass-doll AI faces holding generic bottles.