Photorealistic 3D rendering of luxury black leather airplane seat with detailed stitching and metal mechanical base

3D Product Rendering for a Company Selling Airplane Seats

5 min read
Last Updated on May 12, 2026 by Abdullah Al Baki

The Situation

A company in the United States that manufactures aircraft seats approached us to create realistic product images for their catalog and website.

Their seats are used in small aircraft and are offered with many upholstery options. Customers can choose from different fabrics, leather materials, and color combinations.

If the company tried to photograph every variation, they would first need to manufacture each version of the seat. This would require building many prototypes and organizing multiple photoshoots, which would be expensive and slow.

Instead, they chose to use 3D product rendering services to visualize all seat variations. This allowed them to present consistent, realistic product images without producing physical prototypes for every option. Some of the 3D Product Images we created for them-

The Challenge

At first glance, this project might seem like a standard 3D rendering task. In reality, the client only provided the internal seat frame. The upholstery did not exist yet as a finished product.

Client-provided basic CAD drawing used as reference for photorealistic 3D rendering

Using sketches and reference photos, we designed the upholstery digitally so the final images would show how the seat would look once manufactured.

Our goal was simple: make the seats look exactly like the real product the company would deliver to customers.

Photorealistic 3D rendering of luxury tan leather airplane seat with detailed stitching and metal mechanical base

That meant shaping the upholstery so it naturally wraps around the frame, placing the stitching in the right locations, and making sure the fabrics and leather feel authentic in the images.

Because these images would be used for product sales, the details needed to feel natural and believable. Customers should be able to look at the images and feel confident that the manufactured seat will look the same.

Building an Accurate 3D Model

The client shared several reference materials to guide the work:

  • The 3D cushion geometry for the seat base
  • Photos of the seat frame from different angles
  • Key reference measurements
  • Photos of finished seats used as visual reference
  • Using these materials, we built a clean base model that reflects the real product.
  • Once this base model was approved, it became the foundation for all future seat variations.

Creating Realistic Materials and Details

One of the main reasons product renders look unrealistic is when the materials feel artificial.

So we focused on getting the materials and small surface details right. Subtle folds, creases, and natural variations help the seat feel like a real upholstered product rather than a digital model.

For this project, we developed three main materials Leather, Fabric, and perforated leather

Working Closely With the Client

3D Product visualization often includes a few refinements, especially since the client understands their product better than anyone and knows exactly how the final manufactured seat should look.

After reviewing the images, the client shared feedback such as:

  • Adjusting fabric colors slightly
  • Correcting the weave direction on certain panels
  • Reducing gloss on the leather
  • Refining seam depth and indentations

These refinements helped ensure the product renders matched the real product as closely as possible.

Client markup example showing correct and incorrect fabric grain direction on purple airplane seat – green checkmarks indicate proper direction, red crosses indicate fabric needs to be rotated 90 degrees

This type of collaboration is valuable when creating visuals for manufacturing companies.

Creating a System for Product Variations

Once the model and materials were finalized, we built a rendering setup that allows the client to create many seat variations quickly and consistently.

Using the same base model, the seat can now be presented in:

Different leather colors

Different fabric colors

Single tone designs

Two tone combinations

Perforated and non perforated versions

Because all renders use the same lighting and camera angles, every image looks consistent across the product catalog.

Photorealistic 3D rendering grid showing multiple luxury airplane seat design variations in different fabric and leather colors and textures

The Result

The client now has a flexible set of product images that can be used for their website and marketing materials.

Instead of producing physical samples and photographing them, they can generate images digitally and manufacture the seats based on customer demand.

This allows them to:

  • Show many seat variations online
  • Let customers choose options that match the aircraft interior they are designing
  • Understand which variations attract the most interest and sales
  • Manufacture seats based on confirmed orders
  • Maintain consistent product visuals
  • Reduce the cost of product photography

Please visit 3D product visualization service to know in detail.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

founder of 7cgi limited sitting on a boat

FOUNDER & CREATIVE DIRECTOR

Abdullah has been at the helm of 7cgi Limited since 2015. With a career as a 3D artist that began in 2008, he has positioned himself as an industry thought leader and serves as a mentor to numerous 3D artists today. You can connect with him on LinkedIn to gain from his extensive knowledge and experience.

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