It's always difficult to deal with "right way" questions. But here is one way.
From a DDD perspective, in this specific context, treat the User object as an aggregate root entity and the other objects as child value objects.
$description = new UserDescripton('Some description');
$image1 = new UserImage('head_shot','headshot.jpg');
$image2 = new UserImage('full_body','fullbody.jpg');
$user = new User('The Name',$description,[$image1,$image2]);
$userRepository->persist($user);
First thing to note is that you if really want to try and apply some of the ddd concepts then it is important to think in terms of domain models without worrying about how to persist them. If you find that you are basically writing a CRUD app with a bunch of getters and setters and almost no business logic then pretty much forget about it. All you will end up doing is to add complexity without much value.
The persist line is where the user will get stored. And you certainly don't want to have to write a bunch of code to store and update the children. Likewise, it would normally be waste of effort to make repositories for value objects. If you are going this route then you really need some sort of database layer that understands individual objects as well as their relations. It is the relations that are the key.
I assume you are using Laravel's Eloquent active record persistence layer. I'm not familiar enough with it to know how easy it is to persist and update an aggregate root.
The code I showed is actually based more on Doctrine 2 Object Relation Mapper and pretty much works out of the box. http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-orm/en/latest/ It is easy enough to integrate it with Laravel.
But even Doctrine 2 is largely CRUD oriented. In different domain contexts, the user object will be treated differently. It can start to get a bit involved to basically have different user implementations for different contexts. So make sure that the payoff in the domain layer is worth the effort.