
Give the house a real planted base
Deeper beds and stronger massing make the facade feel settled instead of hovering above the driveway and lawn.
Test curb appeal ideas on your real front elevation. Compare deeper planting, a stronger landing, cleaner driveway edges, and a calmer approach before you spend on the wrong fix.

GardenDream helps you test whether the house needs a stronger base, a better landing, or less hardscape dominance before you start spending real money.
Use a photo that clearly shows the house, the walk, the driveway, and the part of the yard that shapes the first impression.
Call out whether the house feels flat, floating, too concrete-heavy, or weak at the door.
See realistic front-of-house concepts built around your actual facade, not a generic style board.
Refine planting depth, landing size, and front-yard structure before you hire a crew or buy materials.
The strongest curb-appeal fixes usually improve the house-ground connection first and the decorative details second.

Deeper beds and stronger massing make the facade feel settled instead of hovering above the driveway and lawn.

A wider landing, stronger walk, and softer framing can make the front door feel intentional instead of pinched.

When the driveway dominates, one bold bed move can change the whole read of the house from the street.
A lot of houses do not need new finishes first. They need deeper planting, a stronger landing, or a calmer driveway edge.
A bed that sounds oversized on paper can be exactly what the house needs once you see it in place.
Test entry-focused, planting-led, and hardscape-softening moves on the same house before you commit.
It is much easier to change a digital concept than undo the wrong porch detail, paint move, or planting layout later.
Many curb-appeal problems feel cosmetic but are really about hierarchy. GardenDream helps you test how the walk, landing, driveway, and planting work together so the front reads as one calm composition.
See how much planting depth the facade actually needs to feel grounded.
Compare whether the arrival feels too narrow, too shallow, or too easy to miss.
Test how one planted edge or one tree move can reduce the feeling of too much paving.
Explore curb-appeal moves that work with the masonry instead of competing with it.
A curb appeal app helps you upload a photo of your house and test front-of-house changes like planting, walkway, porch, and driveway-edge ideas before you build them.
Yes. GardenDream can help you compare curb-appeal directions on your real house so you can judge massing, planting depth, and entry hierarchy before spending money.
Yes. It is especially useful for brick houses because you can test planting and entry moves before making heavier facade decisions.
Yes. Some of the biggest curb-appeal improvements come from the arrival sequence, not just the plants.
No. You start with a photo of your home and react to visual options, which makes the planning process much easier.