The Agent works best when your request is specific. A good prompt names the product, the change you want, and the look you're after.
Steps
Say what you want done - "stage", "swap the fabric", "make a 360 video".
Name the subject - the product or the image you're working from.
Describe the look - materials, colours, room style, lighting, camera angle.
Send it - the Agent will act, and you can refine in follow-up messages.
Examples
"Stage this oak dining table in a bright Scandinavian kitchen."
"Swap the fabric on this sofa to cream bouclé."
"Write a product description for this lamp, friendly tone, highlight the brass finish."
Tip: Not sure how to phrase it? Ask the Agent to optimise your prompt first, then run it.
Prompt patterns to copy
Prompting isn't a dark art - most good furniture prompts follow the same shape: product + setting + style + light/angle. Start from one of these and tweak.
You want | Try this |
Lifestyle scene | "Stage this [product] in a [room type], [style] aesthetic, natural daylight, eye-level angle." |
Fabric / colour variant | "Swap the fabric on this [product] to [material/colour], keep the shape and dimensions identical." |
Close detail | "Close-up of the [feature] on this [product], soft studio light, shallow depth of field." |
Line & dimensions | "Create a line drawing of this [product] with dimension arrows for width, depth, and height." |
Tip: Keep fixed product traits ("solid oak, brass legs") in the prompt, and vary the scene (room, light) between runs. If a result drifts, add "keep the product unchanged" and use a catalogue product so its dimensions anchor the output.
Related
