Helpful Tips

Lead with Your "Hero" Element
The AI gives the most weight to your earliest selections. Decide what the undeniable centerpiece of your room is—a 'vintage leather armchair', a 'marble waterfall island', or a 'grand spiral staircase'—and make sure its category (Purpose, Space, etc.) is one of your first inputs. This ensures your main idea is always the star of the show.
Start Simple, Then Build Complexity
For your first generation, try selecting only three or four core elements (e.g., a Purpose, a Space, a Style, and a Vibe). This creates a strong foundation. Once you get a result you like, use it as a baseline and introduce just one or two new details—like "Dramatic Lighting" or "Exposed Brick"—on the next iteration. This incremental process gives you precise control over the final image.
Use "Vibe" to Steer the Mood
Don't underestimate the abstract selectors. "Vibe" is your most powerful tool for setting the mood. It acts as a translator for the AI, turning a feeling like 'Serene' into visual details like soft, diffused light and a muted color palette, while 'Energetic' might introduce high contrast and bold, dynamic lines.
Understand the ⚠️ Warning Icon
This icon flags a potential style clash, like combining "Minimalist" and "Maximalist." The prompt will work either way, giving you two options:

For predictable, harmonious results: Avoid selections that trigger the warning.
For creative, unexpected results: Ignore the warning and see what happens! This is where the most unique designs are often discovered.
The Power of Omission
An empty field can be as powerful as a filled one. If you're unsure about a category, it is often better to leave it blank. This prevents the AI from getting distracted by too many competing instructions and allows it to focus its creativity on your most important selections. When in doubt, leave it out.
Anchor Your Vision with a Text Snippet
The "Reference / Notes" field is your most powerful tool for nuance. Use it to describe a specific feeling, a famous style, or a well-known place. This technique, known as "one-shot prompting," gives the AI a strong conceptual anchor. For the best results, use short, descriptive text phrases, not links.
Platform Specific Insights
  • For Midjourney Users: Embrace the "Remix" Buttons. After our app generates your prompt and you get an initial image, use Midjourney's "Vary (Subtle)" and "Vary (Strong)" buttons. This is the platform's most powerful feature for iteration, allowing you to explore variations without starting from scratch.
  • For DALL-E 3 Users: Treat It Like a Conversation. Think of our prompt as the start of a conversation. Because DALL-E 3 is integrated into ChatGPT, you can follow up with plain English commands like, "Now, make the sofa green velvet," or "Add a potted plant on the coffee table."
  • For Stable Diffusion Users: Master the "Negative Prompt". Stable Diffusion is unique in its powerful use of a negative prompt. If your images consistently feature unwanted elements (e.g., "clutter," "mirrors"), use the negative prompt field in your Stable Diffusion interface to explicitly forbid them.
  • For Adobe Firefly Users: Leverage "Style Reference". Firefly's "Style Reference" feature is its superpower. Take an image you generated with the perfect aesthetic, upload it to the Style Reference input, and all future generations will mimic that visual style for incredible consistency.
  • For Google Gemini Users: Aim for Photorealistic Mockups. Gemini currently excels at producing clean, coherent, and photorealistic results. It's the ideal choice when your goal is a straightforward, high-fidelity visual representation of your design concept, almost like a catalog photograph.