Migrate from photoroom to leonardo-ai.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Move Photoroom's product-in-a-scene work into Leonardo.Ai's Canvas Editor. In Photoroom you cut the product out and let AI Backgrounds / Product Staging generate the surrounding scene; in Leonardo, upload the same product image to the Canvas and use Canvas inpainting to mask everything around the subject and regenerate it from a prompt (the new backdrop/scene). Reuse Photoroom staging prompts as the Canvas inpaint prompt, pick a Canvas-supported model, and keep the source image at most 1536x1536 with dimensions divisible by 8 (the documented limits for the init and mask images). The mask must be a white region on a black background; inpainting is applied to the white area. For deletions you did with Magic Retouch, mask the object in Canvas and inpaint it away.
- Warning: Leonardo is a general creative generator, not an e-commerce product tool: it has no dedicated best-in-class commercial-product cutout, AI Shadows, Virtual Model, or Ghost Mannequin, so a clean transparent product mask must be prepared before inpainting rather than produced automatically.
- Warning: Leonardo's Canvas is documented as a legacy feature and excludes its Phoenix flagship (plus Lightning XL / Anime XL) from inpainting, so outputs will not match Photoroom's newest staging models one-to-one.
- Warning: Photoroom bills generative edits from a per-plan monthly AI-credit pool; Leonardo meters Canvas use in daily/monthly tokens (API billed separately in non-expiring credits) — budget the two differently.