Strategic Influence Control

When to use high influence

Use high influence when you'd like to maintain your vision.

Use high influence when you'd like to maintain your vision

Setting the influence level to high (typically 80–100%) tells Vizcom to stay closely aligned with your sketch. This means your sketch becomes the primary source of truth for the final render, and the AI will focus mostly on applying your prompt’s style, materials, and lighting—without making significant changes to the form or proportions.

This setting is especially useful when:

  • You’ve already developed a refined sketch and want to see it rendered clearly and accurately.

  • You're in the later stages of a project where form exploration is complete and visual consistency is important.

  • You’re presenting work to clients, instructors, or peers and need the result to reflect a high level of design intention and control.

Example:

Imagine you’re designing a winter coat and have carefully sketched its silhouette, collar shape, sleeve length, and other details. You want Vizcom to preserve these proportions and details exactly as drawn, but add realistic materials, textures, and lighting to help you visualize the final garment.

You might pair your sketch with a prompt like:

Thick winter coat, front view, fur-lined hood, long sleeves, straight cut, heavy wool fabric, matte texture, deep forest green, subtle stitching details, (fashion catalog lighting:1.3), neutral studio background, clean composition, DSLR fashion photo

At 100% influence, Vizcom will render this coat very close to your sketch, enhancing it with brass and matte textures, but keeping the dimensions and structure untouched.

Tip: High influence is best used when your sketch communicates strong design intent. If your sketch is ambiguous or incomplete, high influence may actually limit Vizcom’s ability to help you explore better alternatives.