
“I inherited tired beds and never knew what to plant. Seeing a cottage garden on my own photo gave me a list to shop.”
Photograph your garden and see it replanted. Try a cottage border, a xeriscape bed, or a low-maintenance scheme, and compare them side by side.
Homeowners, DIYers, sellers & landscapers




Featured in
A planting mistake takes a season to show.
Bed and border shapes with plants that suit the style, so the whole garden reads as one plan.
Plants are cheap one by one and pricey by the bed. Try a scheme on screen before the nursery run.
Shoot the beds, pick a planting style, and get a replanted garden back in seconds.
Cottage, xeriscape, Mediterranean, tropical, and more, applied to a photo of your actual garden, not a stock yard.











































One photo of the beds you want to change is enough.
Shoot the beds and borders you want to change, with the house or fence in frame for context.
Cottage, xeriscape, Mediterranean, or tropical. Each one changes the plants, not just the colors.
See your garden replanted in that style, with bed layouts you can take to a nursery.
What garden redesign actually has to get right.

Each style proposes plants that belong together, so a cottage border reads like cottage and a xeriscape bed looks dry by design, not by accident.

Ask for drought-tolerant or low-maintenance and the plan shifts: tougher plants, less lawn, more mulch and structure.

You get bed and border shapes alongside the planting, so there is a real plan to dig to, not a species list.
Dozens of design styles for any outdoor space, ready in under a minute.
Real garden projects, from first beds to full borders.

“I inherited tired beds and never knew what to plant. Seeing a cottage garden on my own photo gave me a list to shop.”

“I send clients a garden design on their own photo before we price the job, so the back-and-forth drops a lot for us.”

“We went low-water in the front beds this spring, and comparing two xeriscape gardens made the swap an easy call here.”
The usual ways to plan planting, 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.
It proposes plants that fit the style and the look. Check final choices against your climate zone before you buy.
Yes. Ask for xeriscape or low-maintenance and the planting plan shifts to suit.
Both. You get bed and border shapes plus the planting, so there is an actual plan to dig to.
Use it to choose a direction, then confirm species against your local zone. It is a design tool, not a nursery.
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.
Practical tools for planning a garden, built around your own photo.