
The shell of a building is the half of architecture that wins the pitch. The interiors are the half that wins the move-in date — and, increasingly, the half that wins the magazine feature and the rebooking.
Krea 2 renders interiors with material accuracy that holds up to design-publication scrutiny. This article walks through the room types interior designers and architects build over and over — kitchens, bedrooms, bathrooms, dining rooms, home offices, hospitality lobbies, restaurants — with examples generated for this piece.
Living rooms
The default brief: warm modern, linen and oak, gentle late-afternoon light. Easy to get wrong, easy for Krea 2 to get right when the materials are named.
Living room and kitchen
Warm modern living room and a contemporary white oak kitchen with marble island.
Prompts that work: "deep linen sofa," "walnut coffee table," "oak herringbone floor," "tall windows with sheer curtains," "late afternoon warm light." The room is the materials plus the light.
Kitchens
Kitchens are about three things: the cabinetry, the stone, and the hardware. Get those three right and the kitchen reads. The rest is dressing.
To pull a specific kitchen aesthetic — handleless white oak, honed marble waterfall, brushed brass — name each one explicitly. Generic "modern kitchen" prompts produce generic AI kitchens.
Bedrooms and bathrooms
The intimate rooms benefit from restraint. A low platform bed, warm plaster walls, a single piece of art, soft morning light. The bathroom equivalent: stone bathtub, slatted timber ceiling, terrazzo floor, brushed brass.
Bedroom and bathroom
A calm modern master bedroom and a luxe stone-tub bathroom.
Dining and home office
Two rooms that benefit from a single hero element — the table in the dining room, the built-in shelf in the home office. Prompt for the hero element first, then the supporting details.
Dining room and home office
Live-edge oak dining and a quiet walnut-shelved home office.
Hospitality interiors
Where interior design earns its keep at scale — hotels, restaurants, bars, lobbies. The visual language is bolder, the lighting is moodier, the materials are richer.
Hospitality interiors
A boutique hotel lobby and a moody contemporary restaurant.
For hospitality, lean into specifics: "sculptural curved sofa in deep green velvet," "oversized vintage rug," "dramatic brass chandelier," "fluted timber walls." Hospitality interiors are made of icons; name them.
Prompt patterns that work for interiors
- Lead with the hero element. Every great interior render has one — the sofa, the island, the bathtub, the light fixture. Name it first.
- Specify the material palette. "Linen, walnut, brass, oak herringbone." Three to five named materials per room. More dilutes; fewer reads as generic.
- Name the light. "Late afternoon warm light," "soft morning daylight," "evening warm interior lighting," "diffuse overcast through linen curtains." Interior renders live or die by their light.
- Include one piece of art or a sculptural object. A single careful piece anchors the room. Avoid asking for "art" generically; name a category ("large abstract canvas," "ceramic vase collection").
- Specify the camera. "Three-quarter interior view," "wide one-point perspective," "tight detail shot." Different framings serve different decks.
Where this fits in a design workflow
Interior design with Krea 2 lives in two phases of a real project:
- Mood and direction — early in the project, before any selections are made. Generate a dozen versions of the same room with different palettes to align the client.
- Presentation — at the end of selections, before fabrication. Generate the final room with the specified palette, fixtures, and finishes for the client deck.
For full project consistency across many rooms, build a mood board from the locked palette and apply it on every room render.
Render your next interior in Krea 2
Free to start. Mood boards and Edit included on every plan.
Open Krea 2Frequently asked questions
Named designer pieces ("Eames lounge," "Wishbone chair," "Noguchi coffee table") work strongly. For less famous pieces, use an image reference of the actual piece.
Use a material reference image of the color or stone you want. Color words ("warm white," "sage green") get you close; an actual swatch image gets you exact.
Yes. Build a mood board from the palette and apply it on every room. Every render will share material language, lighting feel, and atmosphere.
Yes. Upload the photo as an image reference and describe the new style. Krea 2 will preserve the room geometry while changing the finishes.
For procurement-quality interior renders (FF&E specification, exact finishes), generate the look in Krea 2 to align the client, then run the locked design through your full visualization pipeline for documentation. Krea 2 is the conversation; the spec drawings are the contract.






