Your candle vessel, restaged into the rooms it belongs in
A candle or diffuser sells on atmosphere, but the vessel is the product. KeepThisProduct starts from your photo, so the same jar, lid and label move onto a mantel, a bath ledge, a bedside table — the container held exactly while the room around it changes.






Home-fragrance buyers imagine the piece in their own space, which is why lifestyle context sells — but the vessel has to stay believable. Generic mockups tend to smooth away the exact glass, the lid finish, the printed label, and the result no longer matches the jar that arrives.
A photo-based scene keeps the vessel and rebuilds only the room. The hand-painted lidded jar above holds its form and detail across a warm desk and a marble mantel; a candle or diffuser follows the same discipline — the container never changes, only the setting.
A cozy set from one photo
Photograph the closed vessel once, cleanly. From that you can stage a lit-mantel mood, a spa-like bath ledge, and a plain catalog frame — each keeping the same jar, lid and label, so the set feels like one product styled for several rooms rather than several different jars.
Keep the mood honest to the product: a scene can suggest ambiance, but it should not imply a burn time, a scent throw, a size or a material the candle does not actually have. Atmosphere is styling; the claims live in your description.
The limit worth naming
Fine print on a fragrance label — a scent-note list, safety and burn instructions, a warning panel — can soften when the vessel is restaged small or at a distance. Keep a straight close-up of any safety or ingredient panel, and use scenes for the styled, room-level angles where the vessel reads clearly.
What stays true
- The vessel, lid finish, color and label are carried from your photo — the scene restages the room, not the product.
- A scene suggests ambiance; it should not imply burn time, scent throw, size or materials the product lacks.
- Safety, burn-instruction and scent-note panels can soften at small scale; keep a close-up for those.
Questions, answered plainly
Will the flame or scent be faked in the scene?
A scene styles the room and setting around your real vessel; keep any ambiance honest and do not let it imply a burn time, scent throw or material the product does not have. Those claims belong in your written description.
Does my label stay readable?
The main label — colors, layout, wordmark — is preserved from your photo. Fine safety or scent-note print can soften if the vessel is shown small, so keep a close-up for those panels.
What will a set of room scenes cost?
One free watermarked preview to start, then 5 selected scenes for $9.99, 20 for $29.99, or 60 for $79.99. Each scene gets up to three attempts and one full-resolution final, with no subscription or extra signup.
Keep the vessel, change the room
Photograph the candle or diffuser once, then set it into the rooms it belongs in — vessel, lid and label held true.