Structurally faithful staging
Staging that doesn’t
melt the room.
Vestaro adds furniture and styling to the photo you upload while keeping the room’s real architecture. Walls, windows, ceilings, and floor lines stay where they are, and fixtures and built-ins are preserved, not invented — so the result reads as a real photo a buyer can trust, not an obvious AI render.
BeforeAfter№ 08 — In the field
Working with listing teams across Los Angeles, Charlotte, Chicago, and a steady handful of independent brokerages.








What stays exactly as photographed
Change the furniture. Keep the room.
Walls, windows, and floor lines stay put
Vestaro stages the photograph you uploaded. The walls, windows, ceiling line, and the way the floor meets the room are kept exactly as photographed — furniture is placed against the real room, not a redrawn one.
No shifted corners, no extra openings, no bent perspective.
Fixtures, built-ins, and millwork are preserved, not invented
Fireplaces, mantels, fixed cabinetry, trim, and baseboards remain what they were. The model styles around them rather than inventing features that were never in the room — so nothing appears in the listing that won’t be there at the showing.
You stage around the architecture, never through it.
The result reads as a real photo, not an AI render
Because the input photo’s structure is held fixed, the staged image looks like a normal listing photograph. Buyers judge a room in seconds; staging that warps walls or melts its lines reads as fake and erodes trust before anyone walks in.
Believable at a glance, accurate at the showing.
See the architecture survive the staging
Drag the slider. The room doesn’t move.
In each pair, only the furniture and styling change. The walls, windows, ceiling, and floor lines hold their position — which is what keeps a staged photo believable.
BeforeAfterSame windows, new furniture
The window wall and the daylight coming through it are unchanged. Only the furnishings move — the room a buyer pictures is the room they’ll stand in.
BeforeAfterFloor and walls held fixed
Wall planes and floor lines stay where they were photographed. The restyle reads as a real photo, not a render that quietly stretched the room.
BeforeAfterArchitecture preserved, two looks
Same room, two staging directions — and in both the ceiling, openings, and proportions stay accurate. Styling changes; the building does not.
Staging an empty room or restyling one that’s already furnished? Both keep the room’s real architecture while changing only the furnishings.
Structural accuracy, answered.
Common questions
Any edit to walls, ceilings, floors, windows, doors, frames, built-ins, or the room’s overall geometry. Adding or removing furniture, rugs, art, plants, and decor is staging, not a structural change. The line matters: most MLS and state disclosure rules treat staging as routine but treat altering the property itself as misrepresentation.
Yes. Vestaro stages the photograph you upload — it adds furniture and styling while preserving the room’s real architecture. Walls, windows, ceilings, and floor lines stay in place, and fixtures and built-ins are kept rather than invented. The aim is a staged photo that matches the room a buyer walks into.
That is the point. Because the input photo’s architecture is preserved, the result reads as a real listing image rather than an obvious AI render. Buyers and agents form an impression in seconds; staging that warps the room or melts its lines reads as fake and undermines trust before a showing.
It does not move walls, add or remove windows, change ceiling height, invent fixtures or built-ins, or bend the floor lines to fit furniture. Furniture is placed against the room as photographed. If you want to preview a renovation or a repaint, that is a separate, clearly different workflow — not regular staging.
Many tools optimize only for “looks great” and let the model rewrite anything in frame, including walls and windows. Vestaro keeps the photograph’s architecture fixed and changes only the furnishings and styling, so the staged image and the actual room agree on every structural element.
A photo that shows a wall, window, or fixture that isn’t really there invites complaints, listing removal, and a disappointing showing. Keeping the room honest protects the agent and the buyer, and keeps listing photos aligned with what an appraiser or lender will see in person.
Get started
Your next listing deserves better photos.
Start staging in seconds. No credit card, no design skills.
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