Furniture lifestyle imagery startup Presti releases generative AI

An lifestyle image created with Presti’s AI based on a text prompt and a sample image of the green sofa.

Photo By Presti

PARIS — Furniture-focused AI startup Presti has released a new generative AI system that it says surpasses past AI in overall quality and accuracy. By allowing anybody to create lifestyle imagery without requiring technical expertise, Presti democratizes access to high-quality furniture imagery for small and large furniture retailers and manufacturers. 

This new release opens up a new set of options for users to create more detailed and appealing lifestyle imagery without photoshoots or complex 3D software. The upgraded AI  serves as a new foundation for what is an elaborate suite of tooling that gives the company's customers control over their images while preserving the integrity of their products.

The new AI comes with a number of advantages over the old AI. Besides overall enhanced image quality, it now has a longer context window, which means it is able to understand longer descriptions better, allowing users to be more elaborate and precise on their AI-generated environments. The AI now also better understands concepts like space and depth of field, allowing it to create photography-like images that focus on the product and blur out the background and foreground, adding to the photorealism of the AI. Besides concepts of depth, the AI is now also able to generate text in the images, giving users the possibility to create more engaging content, and integrate custom messages in their photos. Finally, the new AI now also allows to add photorealistic humans to the images, and in doing so gives brands that carry people as part of their visual identity even more flexibility.

For more information or a custom demo, email Presti Co-founder Hamza Bennis at [email protected].  

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Larry Adams | Editor

Larry Adams is a Chicago-based writer and editor who writes about how things get done. A former wire service and community newspaper reporter, Larry is an award-winning writer with more than three decades of experience. In addition to writing about woodworking, he has covered science, metrology, metalworking, industrial design, quality control, imaging, Swiss and micromanufacturing . He was previously a Tabbie Award winner for his coverage of nano-based coatings technology for the automotive industry. Larry volunteers for the historic preservation group, the Kalo Foundation/Ianelli Studios, and the science-based group, Chicago Council on Science and Technology (C2ST).