Create an ultra photorealistic video conferencing background designed for Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Google Meet. The image must read as a real physical architectural wall installation, not graphic design, not wallpaper, and not abstract art.
Overall concept:
A full wall tessellated puzzle wall composed entirely of square company logos. The wall itself is the only background element and the dominant visual signal. No desk, no furniture, no props. This is a brand first architectural backdrop engineered to survive video compression and background blur.
Camera and framing:
Camera positioned at seated eye level, straight on, centered. 16:9 aspect ratio. The wall fills the entire frame edge to edge. No perspective skew. Vertical and horizontal lines remain straight. All logos are fully visible within frame with no cropping or clipping at the edges.
Tessellated wall structure:
The wall is completely covered in square logos arranged in a precise tessellated puzzle pattern. Logos vary in size but interlock perfectly edge to edge. No gaps. No overlaps. No negative space.
No logo is cropped, cut off, or partially visible. Every logo is complete and intact, even at the frame edges.
The layout feels mathematically solved and intentional, not random. The pattern reads as engineered geometry rather than decoration.
Depth variation and parallax:
Logos are mounted at subtly different depths from the wall surface to create physical dimensionality.
Some logos sit nearly flush with the wall.
Some logos project forward slightly.
A small number project forward more prominently.
Depth variation is restrained and deliberate. No extreme extrusion. No floating objects. The effect creates gentle parallax and shadow separation that remains readable even when background blur is applied in video calls.
Depth changes never cause overlap, collision, or occlusion. All logos remain fully visible and clearly defined.
Logo appearance and lighting:
Each square logo is a physical object mounted to the wall, not printed or painted.
Every logo uses extremely bright, vivid, and controlled backlighting that runs cleanly edge to edge around the logo perimeter.
The backlighting is per segment RGB and exactly matches the logo colors.
Where the logo is a particular color, the backlighting glows that color.
No white halo.
No gradients.
No blended colors.
No color bleed between neighboring logos.
Brightness is high and confident but controlled. No clipped highlights. No washed surfaces. The glow feels engineered and intentional, not decorative.
Lighting and realism:
The wall surface is matte and neutral, designed to absorb light and let the logo glow stand out.
Lighting behaves physically correct with soft falloff, subtle shadows, and realistic occlusion from depth variation.
No visible wiring, mounts, brackets, fasteners, or power sources.
Strict exclusions:
No desk.
No monitors.
No furniture.
No shelves.
No plants.
No decor.
No personal items.
No cables, outlets, or power strips.
No reflections revealing the camera or person.
No motion blur.
No artistic distortion or stylization.
Brand isolation override:
The wall contains ONLY repeated instances of the attached logo.
No other company logos, symbols, brand marks, icons, text, or identities are permitted.
This is NOT a partner wall.
This is NOT a customer wall.
This is NOT an ecosystem wall.
This is NOT a collage of different brands.
Every square tile in the tessellated wall uses the exact same logo design, repeated at different sizes and depths.
No AWS.
No Google.
No Microsoft.
No Epic.
No Oracle.
No Slack.
No healthcare vendors.
No cloud providers.
No third party brands of any kind.
If a logo is visible, it must be the logo. No exceptions.
The existence of any logo other than is a failure condition.
Priority rule:
If any visual tradeoff is required, prioritize full logo visibility, edge to edge tessellation, depth variation, and backlighting accuracy over any aesthetic embellishment.
Final mood and intent:
The final image should feel bold, authoritative, and unmistakably branded. This is a background designed for senior technical leadership. It must dominate the frame without distracting from a person seated in front of it and remain visually powerful under compression and blur.