Choosing taupe paint for a windows is one of the most visually impactful — and most often regretted — home decisions. Paint swatches look completely different at scale, under real lighting, and on different surface textures. HouseGPTs AI Paint Designer shows you taupe on your actual windows before you open a tin.
Taupe paint colours are notoriously sensitive to lighting conditions and surface texture. A taupe that reads beautifully in a north-facing room can look completely different in direct afternoon sun — which is why paint swatch decisions made under shop lighting so often disappoint.
AI paint visualisation removes this uncertainty by applying the colour to a photo of your actual windows — under your real lighting conditions — before you commit to purchase.
See how taupe looks on your windows before buying a full tin.
Compare multiple taupe variants on the same surface to find the right depth and undertone.
Share the AI result as a precise colour brief — eliminating any ambiguity about the intended shade.
Take a clear photo of your surface or room in good natural light. A corner angle showing the full space works best. The AI processes any standard photo — JPEG, PNG, or WEBP, up to 10MB.
Browse the style options and select the one closest to your vision. If you're unsure, pick two or three and generate each to compare. You can also use the custom prompt field to describe specific requirements.
Choose an AI model based on your needs. Quick Restyle (2 credits) is great for fast exploration. HD Studio (5 credits) suits client presentations. Ultra Pro (7 credits) produces photorealistic output for high-stakes decisions.
Click Generate and wait 20–40 seconds. Download your design in full resolution to share with contractors, designers, family members, or use as a shopping reference. Generate more variants to compare before deciding.
Photograph your windows in the lighting conditions it experiences most — morning sun, afternoon shade, artificial light.
Use the requirements field to specify finish — matte, eggshell, satin, or gloss — as it significantly changes the final look.
Generate a second render with the adjacent surface in a complementary colour to test the full scheme.