Fenestra 101: Sketch to Render, Virtual Staging and AI Editing for Architects & Interior Designers

A beginner-friendly walkthrough of the core Fenestra workflows, from rough sketches and empty rooms to edited, presentation-ready design visuals.


Photo of man in grid space

Shaun McCallum

June 9, 2026

We recently hosted a Fenestra 101 webinar covering the basics of how architects, interior designers and creative studios can use Fenestra inside their design workflow.


The session was designed as a practical introduction rather than a deep technical walkthrough. We focused on the core things most users want to understand first: how to go from a sketch to a render, how to stage an empty room, how to add furniture or design details, and how to edit or remove parts of an image without starting again.

You can watch the full recording below, or read through the main workflows covered in the session.

https://youtu.be/XcKdCNNOPq8

What we covered in the webinar


The webinar walked through the core Fenestra workflows for turning early design inputs into visual concepts. This included using sketches, empty rooms and existing images as starting points, then developing them with AI rendering and editing tools.

The main workflows covered were:

  • Sketch to render
  • Virtual staging
  • Adding furniture and interior details
  • Editing existing images
  • Removing or subtracting unwanted elements
  • Refining results with simple prompts

The goal was to show how Fenestra can support the early stages of design, where speed, iteration and visual communication matter most.

If you are new to Fenestra, this webinar is a good place to start. It covers the core workflows and shows how you can use the platform for sketch to render, virtual staging, image editing and quick design exploration.

You can watch the full session above, or try the tools yourself inside Fenestra Studio.

Start Drawing.

Create Now.
Fenestra Creates High-Fidelity Visualizations and Interactive 3D Narratives instantly.
2026 Fenestra. All Rights Reserved