Furniture CGI vs photography
Furniture CGI vs traditional photography: which should you use?
Last reviewed June 2026
CGI vs photography vs AI: side by side
Best for: Anyone choosing how to produce furniture imagery for a new range or catalogue refresh.
| Factor | Traditional photography | CGI | AI imagery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost | £500–£2,000/day studio + £300–£800/day photographer + £200–£500/day retoucher | £200–£1,000 per product | ~70–90% lower; credit-based (≈10 credits/image) |
| Turnaround | Days to weeks (booking, shoot, edit) | Days to weeks per asset (modelling + render) | Under 1 minute per lifestyle image |
| Physical sample needed | Yes | No (needs a 3D model) | No (needs one product photo) |
| Fabric / colour variants | Reshoot each | Re-render each | Swap in seconds from a swatch or prompt |
| Catalogue scale | Limited by studio days | Limited by render pipeline | Hundreds of SKUs per batch job |
| Real-world realism | Highest (real materials, light) | High (depends on model quality) | Photorealistic from a real product photo |
| 3D / AR output | No | Yes (native) | Yes (GLB, glTF, OBJ export) |
Cost comparison
Best for: Finance and ops teams modelling the cost of a catalogue refresh.
The headline cost gap is large and widens with volume and variants.
- Photography: a studio day is £500–£2,000, plus £300–£800 for a photographer and £200–£500 for a retoucher — and every fabric variant is another shoot.
- CGI: typically £200–£1,000 per product once a 3D model exists, with modelling cost on top up front.
- AI imagery: credit-based — a quality image is around 10 credits, downloads are free, and brands report 70–90% lower imaging costs overall.
Turnaround time
Best for: Brands whose launches stall waiting on imagery.
Photography and CGI both run on a pipeline measured in days to weeks — booking, shooting or modelling, then editing or rendering. AI imagery generates a finished lifestyle scene in under a minute, and a batch job stages hundreds of SKUs while the team works on something else. Bentincks cut their product upload timeline from 2–3 weeks to just over one week after replacing studio shoots with AI.
What each can and can't do
Traditional photography
Best real-world fidelity — genuine texture, light, and material behaviour. But it needs a physical sample, studio time, and a reshoot for every variant or new scene.
CGI
Infinite angles, configurations, and 3D/AR output, with no physical sample required. But it's slow and expensive to set up, and quality depends heavily on the 3D model and render skill.
AI furniture imagery
Photorealistic lifestyle scenes, fabric swaps, and full-catalogue batches from one product photo, in minutes, at a fraction of the cost. Best paired with a real product photo; not a substitute for a genuine macro detail shot of a brand-new material.
When to use a hybrid approach
Best for: Established brands with hero products and a long tail of variants.
Most furniture brands don't pick one method — they layer them. A common hybrid: shoot or render hero and detail images for flagship products, then use AI for the long tail — lifestyle scenes, fabric and colour variants, seasonal sets, and pre-sales assets before stock lands. Gabriella White used exactly this pattern to cut their silhouette workflow time by about 40% while unlocking lifestyle imagery for locations they could never shoot in person.
Verdict: Use photography or CGI for hero and detail shots; use AI furniture imagery for everything that scales — variants, lifestyle scenes, and catalogue volume.
What furniture brands say
“For the quality of the images against the price it's very much worth the investment. The platform is easy to use and support is never far away. We have already recommended FurnitureConnect to some of our close businesses.”
“Furniture Connect is hands down the best tool on the market for AI imagery in the furniture industry. The platform is incredibly intuitive and purpose-built for real furniture production workflows, excelling in both Silhouette workflows and Lifestyle imagery. What truly sets Furniture Connect apart is their customer service. The team is responsive, proactive, and genuinely invested in your success.”
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between furniture CGI and photography?
Photography captures a real product in a real space with a camera, lighting, and styling. CGI (computer-generated imagery) builds a 3D model of the product and renders it in a virtual scene, so it doesn't need a physical sample. Photography is faster to start but tied to physical logistics; CGI is fully flexible once the model exists but slow and expensive to set up. AI furniture imagery is a third option that generates photorealistic scenes from an existing product photo in under a minute.
Is CGI cheaper than furniture photography?
It depends on volume. A studio shoot runs roughly £500–£2,000/day for the studio, plus £300–£800/day for a photographer and £200–£500/day for a retoucher. CGI is typically £200–£1,000 per product once a 3D model exists. For large catalogues and many variants, AI furniture imagery is usually the cheapest route — brands report 70–90% lower imaging costs than either approach.
When should you use CGI instead of photography?
Use CGI when the product doesn't physically exist yet (pre-production launches), when you need infinite angles or configurations, or when you need 3D models for AR and configurators. Use photography when you need genuine real-world texture and have the sample and budget. Use AI furniture imagery when you already have a product photo and need lifestyle scenes, fabric variants, or full-catalogue imagery fast and cheaply.
Can AI replace furniture photography and CGI?
For most catalogue and lifestyle imagery, yes — AI generates photorealistic scenes from a single product photo at 2K–4K in under a minute. Many brands run a hybrid model: keep photography or CGI for hero and detail shots, and use AI for the long tail of lifestyle scenes, fabric variants, and seasonal refreshes.
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