Animation prompts

Written By Kacper Staniul

Last updated 10 days ago

After setting your frames, you can either select a motion preset or write a custom prompt.

Open "Advanced settings" to see and customize the prompt each preset uses, or remove the prompt and write your own from scratch.

How prompts work in animations

Your uploaded image already defines the scene: the room, the lighting, the materials, everything visual. The prompt only needs to describe how the camera moves and how the environment behaves.

A good animation prompt has up to two parts:

[Camera movement] + [Ambient motion]

You don't need both every time. Camera movement alone is often enough. For static camera shots, describing the ambience is all you need.

Camera movement

Below are the common camera motions you can use in your custom prompts.

Pro tip: combine these with speed modifiers like slowly, gently, or gradually for smooth flythroughs. Use quickly or fast only if you want dramatic speed.

Ambient motion

Animation prompt examples

Use these prompts as starting points. Copy one, swap in your scene details, and adjust the camera direction.

Interiors

  • The camera slowly orbits left around the dining table, candlelight flickers softly

  • Slow zoom in on the kitchen countertop, warm light gently shifts across the surface

  • Gentle dolly forward, fire flickers in the fireplace, warm light softly shifts on the walls

Exteriors

  • The camera slowly orbits right around the building, soft clouds drift in the sky

  • The camera dollies forward along the garden path, leaves rustle gently in the breeze

  • The camera slowly rises from ground level, revealing the full elevation and mountains in the background

Landscapes

  • The camera slowly pans right across the garden, leaves sway gently in the breeze, day turns into night

  • Fixed camera, rain falls steadily on the terrace, water pools ripple gently

  • The camera pans left, gradually revealing the terrace and the landscape beyond

With people

Note: human movement is less predictable than camera-only or environmental prompts. You may need to generate a couple of times to get a clean result.

  • A man in a suit walks forward through the office corridor, the camera follows from behind

  • A woman walks into frame from the left and sits down on the sofa, the camera holds still

  • A woman leans on the balcony railing looking out at the view, her hair moves gently in the breeze

  • Two people sit at the dining table talking, gesturing naturally, the camera slowly pans right

Get creative

There are no limits to what you can create. Write a custom prompt describing any kind of animation you need.

  • Fixed camera. A closed carton box drops on the floor and explodes. The furniture smoothly comes out of the box and furnishes the room. (start and end frame needed)

  • Fixed camera. A crane slowly lowers the modular house to the ground. (start and end frame needed)

  • Thick, vivid oil paint erupts from the center and rushes outward in every direction, flooding the sketch with rich color. (use a black and white input)

Animations best practices

Describe motion, not the scene

Your image already shows the scene. Don't repeat what's visible.

  • Bad: Modern living room with white walls, wooden floor, large windows with natural light, the camera pans right

  • Good: The camera slowly pans right, revealing the ocean view behind the balcony windows

Use degree words for motion intensity

The AI can't infer speed or intensity from your image alone. Always mention it in your prompts.

  • Bad: The trees move

  • Good: The trees sway gently in the wind

Words like slowly, gently, quickly, strongly, and slightly make a big difference.

Don't use negative prompts

Saying what you don't want won't work. Always describe what you do want.

  • Bad: No camera shake, don't zoom in

  • Good: Steady, locked camera with no movement or The camera pans smoothly to the left

Keep it short

One to two sentences is the sweet spot. Focus on describing the camera motion and ambience.