WedVis
What’s new
·Monthly digest

May at WedVis

A rebuilt Aesthetic Atelier, image annotation on every result, an assistant that sees what you see, and a real app on your phone.

This month leans on what was already there and pushes it forward — a rebuilt Aesthetic Atelier, real annotations on every generated image, an assistant that can finally see what you're looking at. Plus dozens of quieter improvements stitched between them.

The Aesthetic Atelier

The aesthetic builder isn't new — it's been part of WedVis since the early days. What's new this month is how much further it goes.

Drop in photos you love, a Pinterest board, or a few words about the feeling you want. The Atelier reads the palette, the texture, the mood — and gives you back a board that captures what you've been trying to describe. Thirteen style dimensions (up from ten — we added Time of Day, Season, and Formality), twenty starter presets (Coastal Romantic, Italian Villa, Marigold & Mandap, Quiet Luxury), and a new signature note that anchors the whole thing to your story.

Every generated image, every pro proposal, every moodboard you make from here forward inherits that vision.

Tell us exactly what to change

Sometimes a generated image is almost right. The arch is perfect, but the florals are wrong. The table is yours, but the candles need warmth.

Now you can pin the spot, or draw a region, and type what you want different. We take that note seriously — only the area you marked changes, the rest stays. Works on uploaded reference images too, before the first generation.

Fewer regenerations. Fewer "close but not quite" rounds. A faster path to the image you actually want to print.

An assistant that sees what you see

Your wedding assistant has been there since launch — answering vendor questions, drafting messages, helping you think out loud. This month it learned to see.

Show it the venue photo and ask whether the arch would feel too tall. Speak instead of type when your hands are full of swatches. It already knows your aesthetic, your dates, your guest count — so the answer comes back in your colors. We also kept it inside the app, not the open web, so its suggestions stay grounded in your workspace.

Ask it to draft a vendor message, sketch a timeline, or pull together a mood for your rehearsal dinner. It does the work; you make the call.

A second set of eyes for every proposal

For wedding pros: the Pro Executive Assistant got a tone overhaul. It now reads like a senior designer, not a copywriter. Hand it a client's inspiration and it returns a vision board that honors the palette instead of drifting from it.

Draft a proposal and it flags when your hero image is fighting your typography. Build a moodboard and it suggests the one florals shot that completes the story. Every recommendation cites what it saw on the board, so you can keep what you love and push back on what you don't.

Keep your wedding in your pocket

WedVis now installs on your phone like any other app. Tap once on iPhone or Android and it lives on your home screen — full-screen, no browser bars, faster load.

Your aesthetic, your boards, your assistant, all one icon away on the drive home from the venue or the morning you remember a vendor question at 6am.

Small but mighty

A handful of quieter wins worth knowing about:

  • Voice input on the Create Vision prompt and across both assistants — dictate edits instead of typing
  • Pinterest connections now follow you, not the workspace — connect once, use across every workspace you own (pros had been re-connecting for every new client)
  • The image picker stays fast even on accounts with thousands of images — paginated grid, lazy thumbnails, no more browser crashes
  • "Apply Aesthetic" on vision boards now actually transforms the canvas — paper tone, accent border, palette rail all shift to match
  • Moodboard got a visual rebuild — white canvas, editorial layouts, the same italic Playfair the rest of the product uses
  • Sign-in and sign-up pages refreshed to match the editorial aesthetic

More on the way in June. As always — reply if anything's getting in your way, or if you want a 15-minute walkthrough.