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How to Create Specific Room Scenes

Learn how to write detailed scene descriptions including wall colours, flooring, props, and lighting to get exactly the room you envision.

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Written by Pavir Patel
Updated today

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.

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