Why scene details matter
If you want a specific look — not just “a bedroom” but a particular mood, colour palette, and lighting setup — you need to describe the scene in detail. The more specific your prompt, the closer the result will be to your vision.
What to include in your scene description
Room type: bedroom, living room, kitchen, office, etc.
Wall colours or materials: “slightly dark coloured walls”, “exposed brick”, “white panelled walls”
Flooring: “light coloured carpet”, “herringbone wood floor”, “polished concrete”
Lighting: “soft, diffused natural light”, “warm pendant lighting”, “bright daylight from the left”
Props and furnishings: plants, art, rugs, cushions, lamps
Important: use “create” not “add”
Always start your prompt with “create a lifestyle image of this [product]” rather than “add this [product] to a room.” The “create” phrasing works significantly better with our AI model.
Example
✅ Good prompt: create a lifestyle image of this wardrobe, in a modern bedroom. With slightly dark coloured walls, a light coloured carpet. Use a soft, diffused natural light for the scene |
This prompt specifies everything: the product (wardrobe), room type (modern bedroom), wall colour, flooring, and lighting. The result will closely match this description.
❌ Bad prompt: Add this wardrobe, to a modern bedroom, keep the angle the same. With slightly dark coloured walls, a light coloured carpet. Use a soft, diffused natural light for the scene |
While this has good detail, the “Add this” phrasing and “keep the angle the same” instruction don’t work well with our model. Use “create a lifestyle image” instead.
