Documentation

Everything InteriorAID can do — from organizing projects to AI image edits, video, 3D scenes, versioning, and sharing.

Projects & SpacesAI OperationsVersioningSharing

How InteriorAID is organized

InteriorAID keeps your work organized in a simple, nested structure. Understanding it makes everything else click into place.

Project

Top-level container for one job — an apartment, a house, a client.

Space (Room)

A room or area inside the project — kitchen, bedroom, office…

View

A single camera angle within a space, started from a photo, sketch, or render.

Version

Every AI result, saved and linked to its parent so you can branch and step back.

Projects

A Project is the top-level container for everything related to one job. Create one from your dashboard (the New Project button) or from the workspace sidebar.

Give it a name and an optional description. Newly created projects open automatically so you can start adding rooms right away. Your projects list is sorted by most recently opened.

Spaces (Rooms)

A Space is a room or area inside a project. Add one with the + next to “Spaces (Rooms)” in the workspace sidebar, name it, and pick a room type — living room, kitchen, bedroom, bathroom, office, dining room, hallway, outdoor, or other.

Each space keeps its own views and version history, so a single project can cover an entire home, room by room.

Views (Photos / Sketches / Renders)

A View is a single camera angle or composition within a space. Use Add view (photo / sketch / render) to upload a starting image — a real photo, a hand sketch, or a 3D render.

That uploaded image becomes the root of the view's version history. A space can hold several views (for example two angles of the same kitchen), each with its own independent set of AI results.

Image operations

Image operations are the core AI editing tools, found in the right-hand Image Actions panel of the studio. Select an image, choose an operation, set its options, and generate — each run saves a new version you can keep refining.

Restyle Room

Change the design style — modern, minimalist, industrial, Scandinavian — while preserving the room's layout, camera angle, and architecture. Generate 1–5 variants at once.

Photorealize

Turn sketches, 3D renders, or line drawings into photorealistic images. Tune the realism strength, lighting, and style.

Edit Area

Paint a mask over a specific region and change only that area (swap a sofa, repaint a wall) while the rest of the image stays untouched.

Match Moodboard

Apply the colors, materials, and atmosphere of one or more reference images to your room, keeping its structure.

Generate Variants

Create several alternative versions of the current design at once — vary materials, colors, furniture, or lighting.

Continue Editing

Keep refining the current version with a new prompt, extending the same branch step by step.

Upscale

Increase resolution while preserving detail — ideal for final exports and presentations.

Tip: operations that support variants let you generate several results in one run — pick the one you like and branch from it. See prompting tips for getting the best output.

Video generation

Turn any photorealistic image into a short cinematic clip with the Generate Video operation (under Advanced). It works best on high-quality, photorealistic source images.

Configure:

  • Motion type — Cinematic (recommended), Orbit, Walkthrough, or Reveal.
  • Duration — 3s, 5s, 10s, or 15s. Longer clips take longer to process.
  • Motion strength — Subtle, Moderate, or Dynamic.
  • Motion instructions (optional) — describe the camera move, e.g. “slowly pan toward the window.”

Generation runs in the background; the finished video is saved as a new version you can download or share.

3D Gaussian Splat scenes

The Generate 3D Scene operation builds a navigable 3D Gaussian Splatting scene from an image or video using World Labs. The result is an interactive environment you can move through right in the browser.

Pick a reconstruction quality— higher quality produces a richer scene but costs more tokens and takes longer (from a couple of minutes up to half an hour). You can add optional scene instructions to guide what's generated beyond the frame.

Finished scenes open in the built-in 3D viewer and can be shared with a public viewer link so clients can explore the space themselves.

Versioning & branching

Every operation saves a new Version linked to the one it came from. Nothing is ever overwritten — open the View History tray at the bottom of the studio to step back through every result.

Run a new operation from an earlier version and you create a branch: a separate design direction that lives alongside the original. Branches are labeled (for example “Modern” and “Rustic”) so you can develop multiple ideas in parallel and switch between them from the branch switcher.

Variants generated together are grouped, so a single run that produced five options stays tidy in the timeline while remaining fully accessible.

Sharing

Share your work with a public link — viewers don't need an account. Mark individual versions as shared, then use Copy link in the sidebar to share the whole project; the public page shows every shared result grouped by room, with full-screen viewing and downloads.

3D scenes have their own interactive viewer link. Use Preview to open the public page exactly as a viewer will see it before you send it on.

Writing good prompts

Prompts steer image, video, and 3D operations. A few habits make a big difference.

Structure beats keywords

Lead with the subject, then style, then context. Connect elements into one coherent scene rather than listing tags.

❌ Weak (keyword list)

“Kitchen, white, marble, modern, bright, clean, minimal”

✅ Strong (structured)

“Modern kitchen with white marble countertops and clean lines, bright natural lighting, minimalist aesthetic”

Describe what you want

Focus on the result, not what to avoid. Instead of “no clutter, no dark colors,” write “clean, organized living room with light colors and minimal decor.”

Match length to complexity

Short (10–30 words)

Simple ideas, fast iteration.

Medium (30–80 words)

Most scenes — balanced control.

Long (80+ words)

Complex scenes and technical requirements.

Ready to create?

Start a project, add a room, and run your first operation.