Archsynth renders the sketch.MONA runs the project.
Archsynth is a capable image utility: sketch to render, upscales, quick passes. But like every raw AI render tool, each pass is a reroll. Ask it to fix the cabinet and it repaints the kitchen, inventing hardware and windows you never drew. MONA edits like a designer: change exactly what you name, hold everything else still, and never put an object in the room that is not in the plan.
Pick the tool that fits the job.
Choose Archsynth for
Cheap one-off renders
A quick sketch-to-render pass or upscale where the image is the entire deliverable.
Image utilities
Background removal, inpainting, and enhancement as standalone tools.
Student budgets
Learning and experimenting where a low-cost point tool is the right fit.
Choose MONA for
Edits without the reroll
Revision two should change one thing, not gamble the whole frame. MONA holds what the client already approved.
Renders that lead somewhere
Products, budgets, purchase orders, and delivery tracking behind the approved image.
The client-facing layer
Decks, shared spaces, approvals, and revision history your studio can run a business on.
Archsynth and MONA, capability by capability.
Where MONA wins.
01
The OS, not the utility
Point tools produce files. MONA produces outcomes: the approved design, the ordered products, the delivered room.
02
Revision-safe by design
Raw render tools reroll the frame on every pass, so revision three can undo what the client loved in revision one. MONA changes what you name and holds the rest still, pass after pass.
03
No invented details
No hallucinated hardware, no windows that are not in the drawing, no decor the model dreamed up. If it is in the render, it is in your plan or your product list.
04
The plan drives the render
Geometry comes from the drawing set, so the visualization matches what the contractor will build, and style and material locks hold the scheme across every render.
05
Products, not just pixels
Rendered objects map to real products with specs, pricing, and lead times, straight into the budget.
06
Agents carry the workflow
Brief the outcome and MONA plans, renders, checks, and delivers, instead of you operating tools screen by screen.
Frequently asked questions.
Is Archsynth good for interior designers?+
As a quick image utility, it can be handy. The limits show up the moment work becomes a project: each pass rerolls details the client already approved, objects appear that were never in the drawing, and there is no scheme, product list, or client workflow behind the image. Those are the parts MONA is built for.
Why do AI render tools change things I did not ask them to change?+
Raw image models apply edits by regenerating the scene, so every revision is a new interpretation of the whole frame, hallucinated extras included. MONA constrains generation to your plan, your palette, and your products, and applies edits to the thing you named while holding everything else fixed. That is the difference between an image tool and a design tool.
What is the real difference between Archsynth and MONA?+
Archsynth is a rendering point tool. MONA is a studio operating system where rendering is one capability inside project management, sourcing, procurement, presentations, and financials, executed by agents.
Is MONA worth it over a cheaper render tool?+
If images are your entire need, a point tool is cheaper. If you bill for delivered projects, the hours MONA returns on sourcing, decks, revisions, and procurement dwarf the subscription difference.
Can I use both?+
You can, but most studios stop needing to. Once renders live inside the system that also holds the plan, the products, and the client, a standalone image tool becomes a detour.
How much does MONA cost?+
MONA plans start at $19 per month, with studio plans at $99, $199, and $399 per month. Every plan starts with a 7-day free trial, and there is a 30-day money-back guarantee.
See MONA on your own projects.
Upload a floorplan and watch the room come back photoreal, with the products, the deck, and the budget behind it.