
“Six-foot privacy felt like it would box us in. Seeing it on our own yard, then a horizontal slat, changed the order.”
Fencing is priced by the foot and hard to undo. Photograph the line and see the style, height, and material on your real yard before a contractor quotes it.
Homeowners, DIYers, sellers & landscapers




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A long run of the wrong fence is an expensive mistake.
Privacy, picket, horizontal, or panel, rendered along your actual yard at the height you set.
Test how much a 6-foot privacy fence closes the yard in before you live with it.
No site visit to learn whether horizontal slat or board-on-board suits the house.
Modern, classic, and rustic fence looks, applied to a photo of your actual property line, not a stock yard.




























One photo along the property line is enough.
Shoot the run where the fence goes, with the house or yard for context so the height reads true.
Privacy, picket, horizontal, panel, or metal. Set the height and whether to plant against it.
Get a few fence styles on your real yard and decide before you price the run.
What an honest fence concept has to get right.

Board-on-board, horizontal slat, picket, or panel, rendered along your line so the look is a choice you can see, not a sample at the store.

See how a 4-foot picket versus a 6-foot privacy fence changes the feel of the yard before you commit to either.

Cedar, composite, vinyl, or metal, with climbers or a hedge softening it, against your actual house color.
Dozens of design styles for any outdoor space, ready in under a minute.
Real fence projects, from privacy to picket.

“Six-foot privacy felt like it would box us in. Seeing it on our own yard, then a horizontal slat, changed the order.”

“I show two fence styles on the client's own yard photo before the quote. We get fewer change orders later in the build.”

“We softened the fence with a hedge. Comparing the run with planting and without it made the whole call easy for us.”
For fence and landscape pros generating client concepts at volume, with team access.
The usual ways to plan a fence, and where each one leaves you.
| Feature | Landscape designer | Design software | Guessing | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Getting to a design | ||||
| See it on your actual yard | ||||
| First design in under a minute | ||||
| No skills or software to learn | ||||
| Try many styles cheaply | ||||
| Cost & commitment | ||||
| Typical cost to start | $ | $$$$ | $$ | Free |
| Time to a usable concept | ~1 min | 1-3 weeks | Hours | — |
| Locked into one direction | ||||
| Confidence | ||||
| Decide before you spend | ||||
| Share concepts with a pro | ||||
Short answers before you upload.
Yes. It designs from your photo, so the fence runs along your real line at the height you set, not a stock yard.
Yes. Try board-on-board, horizontal slat, picket, or panel at different heights on the same photo.
Yes. Add climbers or a hedge against the fence and compare it softened versus bare.
No. It is a concept to take to a fence contractor. It sets the style, height, and look, not post spacing, footings, or property-line surveys.
OutdoorBrite is a paid product, with no free tier. Plans cost a fraction of hiring a designer and scale with how many designs you generate and the resolution you need.
Design the whole yard around the fence, not just the fence.
One photo. A fence you can picture. Concepts in seconds.