RedLight Home · Therapy Panel
Red-Light Therapy Panel, Rebuilt for the Store
A full set of photorealistic e-commerce renders for RedLight Home, rebuilt in 3D from reference photos so the therapy panel could be shown from every angle, clean and consistent, on a tight deadline.
How do you make store-ready product renders from only reference photos?
When RedLight Home needed store-ready imagery for their e-commerce listing and social ad creatives but only had reference photos of the real device, the fix was to rebuild it as a clean 3D asset. That gives unlimited, perfectly consistent angles without ever shooting the physical product.
I modeled the panel from scratch in Cinema 4D, holding clean topology and UVs throughout so every LED lens, vent slot and seam stayed sharp at any camera distance. Custom shaders matched the real materials: the textured white housing, the polished LED reflectors, the metal hardware and the branded back with its red power switch.
Lit and rendered in Redshift on clean white backgrounds, the set covers a hero shot, front and three-quarter angles, the panel on its rolling floor stand, and a close-up of the LED grid, delivered as high-resolution images ready to drop straight onto the listing.
Every angle, ready for the listing
Seven consistent angles, shot to cover a full product listing: straight front and three-quarter views, the panel on its mobile floor stand, and a tight close-up on the LED grid and the RED LIGHT HOME mark, all on a clean white background.
Built from reference in Cinema 4D
With only reference photos to work from, I rebuilt the panel from scratch in Cinema 4D, holding clean topology and UVs so the LED lenses, vents, seams and floor stand stayed crisp at any distance. These are the working viewports behind the render set.
Clean assets, unlimited angles
RedLight Home received seven high-resolution, brand-consistent renders ahead of a strict deadline, deployed across their online store and social ad creatives. Once the product exists as a clean 3D asset, any new angle or background is just another render away.
If you have a product but only reference photos, the same approach can give your store unlimited consistent listing imagery. Say hello!
