Use Image A as the starting frame and Image B as the final target frame. Create a smooth cinematic transformation where the vegetation physically grows out of the real surfaces and gradually transforms the scene from Image A into Image B. Do not make this a simple fade, dissolve, opacity transition, or crossfade between two images. The effect must feel like realistic organic growth happening inside the scene. Preserve the exact original framing, crop, camera distance, perspective, proportions, scale, and composition throughout the entire shot. The camera must remain completely locked: no zoom, no pan, no tilt, no rotation, no lens change, and no perspective shift. Keep all architectural elements perfectly aligned and unchanged in shape and position. The only transformation is the realistic growth of vegetation.The plants should emerge naturally from the cracks, seams, carved panels, stone textures, edges, handles, and surrounding surfaces. Start with tiny sprouts and subtle green traces appearing in the cracks. Then let thin vines extend and creep across the surface, leaves gradually unfold, and small realistic flowers softly bloom. The greenery should spread step by step until the final frame naturally matches Image B. The effect should feel like a high-end CGI visual effect in a film: elegant, subtle, believable, and photorealistic. Keep the original textures visible beneath the vegetation. Maintain realistic natural lighting and consistent color. The transformation must look physical and alive, not like one still image fading into another. Negative prompt: simple fade, dissolve, crossfade, opacity transition, image blending, double exposure, ghosting, zoom, camera movement, pan, tilt, rotation, perspective change, crop change, framing shift, changing the architecture, background replacement, shaky camera, flicker, blur, morphing, fantasy plants, cartoon plants, glowing magical plants, chaotic overgrowth, excessive flowers, dark horror lighting, heavy color grading, low detail, text, watermark