NEW AI for Real Estate 🔥 this will change everything
Вставка
- Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
- In this episode I show a new free tool you can use to transform real estate photos into concept images allowing you to provide additional service to clients. Below are pertinent links and to things mentioned in the video:
My online courses to learn Real Estate Photography:
LearnRE.Nathan...
Learn Pro Interior Photography:
ProInteriors.N...
Expert Editing for Interior Photography:
ExpertEditing....
Learn Pro Exterior Photography:
ProExteriors.N...
Learn Videography for Real Estate:
ProVideo.Natha...
My books on real estate photography:
amzn.to/3T84iax
My Baby Elephants Collection:
BabyElephants....
Baby Elephants, the children's book:
amzn.to/4aXWIFZ
Adobe Firefly:
firefly.adobe.com - Навчання та стиль
I can’t wait to try this on landscaping and even decking !
I just want Photoshops sky replacement to stop leaking into roofs
Yes, this is a very useful tip. Photographers could pitch this as a service to remodeling contractors or to help interior designers they work with.
With such a low barrier to entry though, couldnt remodelers do this themselves?
@@Perceivedshift That's a good question. An important point to bear in mind is that as I mentioned in the video, this would be geared towards listing clients (realtors). For remodel companies, it depends. Some will have someone who can generate renders using higher cost rendering software, and that is more likely what they would do. But, it depends on the level of effort they want to put into it compared to the cost of what you could offer. For instance, some smaller remodel companies don't have the staff for designers, and instead are construction-centric in their labor pool. These companies sometimes have photographers take before and after photos, and if they know this is a service you provide then they may be inclined to have you try a few renditions. Either way though, this would be primarily geared toward realtors to help sell a house by showing what a remodel could make the property look like. Also, even though something is simple doesn't mean a client will want to do it themselves. Busy clients like one-stop shops: a media creator who can to it all (photos, video, virtual staging, etc.). If you can show your worth and that you can provide a convenience service, then you have a good chance of getting the entire gig compared to your competition that doesn't offer as many add-on services. Lastly, this is a nascent technology, so being a first-to-market media provider would give you a leg-up.
@@Perceivedshift I thought about that before I posted this.
Sure that’s part of the equation with contractors. Just as it’s part of the equation with many real estate agents doing dyi RE photography.
@@NathanCoolPhoto Thanks for the reply Nathan! Always great to read your insight and to be honest its refreshing to hear from you...always makes me want to work harder in our field of work. I definitely take pride in being a one-stop-shop for my clients and I'm always looking for more product offerings. I'm really hoping to bring by older brother in the biz by offering real estate agent personal websites, especially with how important it'll now be for agents to market themselves to land more listings. One question, I use cubicasa for floorplans, but sometimes I like to build a floor plan from a Matterport tour myself so I can deliver it faster than Matterport. Problem is I haven't found any good software to build floor plans, have you found anything that works?
WOW. Thanks for this! It's going to be really interesting testing this out.
Some years ago you make a revolution in my life providing a very well knowledge regarding Real Estate Photography. Now you providing another revolution updating my skills again. I am so grateful for that. 📸
Thank you Eduardo! You just made my day 😊
Very informative video. While have used plain old Gen Fill to rescue a couple of architecture projects, have never gone the reference image route. Many thanks.
Glad it was helpful!
Last week I had a client reach out to relicense some photos of a townhome that I photographed for a listing 4 years ago. The original photos looked good but the space had a ton of furniture and decoration in it at the time of photography. This made object removal in Photoshop fairly difficult. In many instances I ended up just replacing furniture or artwork with more on-trend styles using generative fill in Photoshop Beta. Overall, the results were impressive. Especially impressive was the ability for the generated objects to adapt to the present lighting conditions of the original photo. The resolution of the generated objects wasn't as high as the resolution of the photo being edited. I always use max resolution photos for retouching and object removal. Hopefully the render resolution increases in Photoshop for generated objects. It shouldn't matter much in this particular case as I will resize the whole photo to MLS resolution to deliver and all digital sins should be washed over. You can see where the tech is quickly headed.
Hello Nathan. I tried several images of kitchens, some very simple, some more complicated. The results are far from realistic. It keeps planting windows on walls, faucets emerge out of the counter tops, leaves grow out of cabinets and doors appear where the refrigerator should be. Editing will not save these images either as the errors are too many. Just my results...
Sounds like you need to try varying strengths of the structure reference, and, it can take many tries with tweaking the settings and your prompts as well.
Great video!! Thank you!!
Thank you! Glad you liked it!
Mind Bogglings
What would be a good amount, or range, to price these renders?
I'd consider it, at base price, as what you charge for a virtually staged image, then go up from there depending on how much editing they'd like on top of that.
@@NathanCoolPhoto Great answer, as rates can vary by region. And since I already have rates for virtual staging, I would have something to tie it to. Thanks!
I imagine this would work for exteriors as well, no?
Yes! Definitely would.
What could you call this service on paper ?
I'd think about calling it "Virtual Remodel"
@@NathanCoolPhoto thank ☺️
It's insane what we could do now with Adobe's AI. I can virtually stage in the box now without additional third party software or services.