Copy Render
Reuse the style, model, and seed of a render across different perspectives of the same building.
Copy Render carries the style, model, and seed of an existing render over to a new view. Use it when you're rendering multiple angles of the same building and want them to feel like they belong together — matching materials, lighting, mood.
Pro-only. This is the official flow for multi-view consistency — no need to copy prompts manually.
When to use it
- You rendered the front elevation of a house and now want the side or 3D perspective to match
- You finalized the look of a hero shot and want that exact treatment applied to detail shots
- You want different perspectives of the same project to share one visual identity for a client deck
If you just want to re-render the same view with a tweak, use Generate a new version or Edit this image from the chat — not Copy Render. See Refine and Iterate.
How it works
Inside the project, the building lives across multiple views (also called perspectives). Each view can have its own uploaded image — a plan, an elevation, a 3D angle. See Projects and Views.
Copy Render takes the render output of one view and applies the same generation recipe — style, model, and seed — to a different view's input. The geometry still comes from your new upload; only the look is reused.
Step by step
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Create (or open) the new view — the one you want to render in a different angle
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Upload the image for that view (plan, elevation, 3D, whatever)
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At the top of the editor, next to Render, click the Copy Render tab:

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The Change Render Perspective panel opens:

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Pick the reference render you want to reuse. You can pull from any render in the project
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Hit render. The new perspective comes out consistent with the reference
What gets copied vs. what doesn't
| Copied from the reference | Driven by the new view |
|---|---|
| Style | Uploaded image / geometry |
| Model | Viewpoint / camera angle |
| Seed | Any new prompt text you add |
| Overall look & mood |
If you want to nudge the result (e.g., "same look but at sunset"), add a short prompt alongside Copy Render. Big changes are better handled by a plain new render.
Tips
- Start with your strongest render. Copy Render's output is only as good as the reference. Pick the render that nailed the look
- Use it across a project, not across projects. It's built for multi-view consistency inside one building, not for applying a style library across unrelated projects — for that, use References → Upload style
- Don't over-copy. If three perspectives all use Copy Render off the same seed, they'll look near-identical. For variety (dusk / noon / night of the same building), generate fresh renders instead
Related
- Projects and Views — how views (perspectives) fit inside a project
- Refine and Iterate — Generate a new version vs. Edit this image
- Generate Renders — References, Styles, Materials