Use the uploaded image as the exact base frame and edit target. Preserve the original door, wall, stone arch, framing, crop, camera distance, perspective, proportions, scale, lighting, and composition exactly. Do not zoom in or out, do not crop, do not widen the frame, do not shift the camera, do not change the angle, and do not redesign the architecture. Keep the original scene fully recognizable and unchanged in shape and position. The image must align as closely as possible with the original photo for a smooth transition in After Effects. Only add realistic natural vegetation growing on the existing surfaces. Add delicate ivy, thin climbing vines, small green leaves, and a few realistic flowers growing organically from the cracks, seams, carved panels, edges, handles, stone frame, wall texture, and surrounding architecture. The plants should look photorealistic, natural, and believable, as if they are slowly growing out of the real material. The vegetation should be elegant and balanced, not too chaotic. Include realistic white daisy-like flowers, small purple blossoms, subtle pink flowers, and natural green ivy. Keep the original textures visible. Maintain natural lighting, realistic colors, high detail, and a clean cinematic look. The final result should look like the same original scene, only beautifully overgrown with real plants and flowers. Negative prompt: zoom, camera movement, camera shift, perspective change, crop change, wider frame, closer frame, changed architecture, changed door shape, missing handles, missing metal plates, background replacement, fantasy plants, cartoon flowers, artificial-looking plants, glowing plants, too many flowers, chaotic vegetation, dark horror lighting, heavy color grading, blur, low detail, distortion, morphing, text, watermark