
“We argued about pavers versus stamped concrete for months. Seeing both on our own patio ended it in ten minutes.”
Photograph your patio and see it rebuilt. Try paver patterns, a pergola, built-in seating, or an outdoor kitchen, and compare them side by side.
Homeowners, DIYers, sellers & landscapers




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Hardscape is the costly part to redo.
Pavers, stone, concrete, or wood laid on your actual patio, at the real scale, before a yard of it is ordered.
Settle the layout and material first so contractor bids compare like for like instead of guesses.
Shoot the slab, pick a material, and get layout concepts back in seconds.
Modern, Mediterranean, desert, tropical, and more, applied to a photo of your actual patio, not a stock yard.































One photo with the house wall in frame is usually enough.
Shoot the full slab or deck with the house wall in frame so the proportions stay right.
Stone, pavers, concrete, or wood. Add a pergola or kitchen and the layout adjusts.
Get several concepts of your real patio so you can rule options out before quoting them.
What patio redesign actually has to handle.

See the same patio in pavers, stone, concrete, or wood. The texture and joint pattern change with each one, so you judge the look before a yard of material is ordered.

Ask for a pergola, built-in seating, or an outdoor kitchen and it places them on your slab at a believable scale, so you judge the layout, not just the surface.

Include the roofline or cover in the photo and it designs around it, instead of pretending the patio is open to the sky.
Dozens of design styles for any outdoor space, ready in under a minute.
Real patio projects, from pavers to pergolas.

“We argued about pavers versus stamped concrete for months. Seeing both on our own patio ended it in ten minutes.”

“I mock up a pergola and a kitchen on the client's patio photo, and the talk moves to budget far faster than usual.”

“Covered patio, low light, lots of opinions at home. Comparing two layouts settled where the seating worked best.”
The usual ways to plan a patio, 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. Try pavers, stone, concrete, or wood on the same patio and compare them directly, so the choice is a decision and not a guess.
Yes. Ask for a pergola, built-in seating, or a kitchen and it places them on your slab at a believable scale.
Yes. Include the cover or roofline in the photo and it designs around it instead of treating the patio as open.
No. It is a concept to take to a builder. It sets the look and layout, not exact measurements.
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 patio, built around your own photo.