AI Prompts for Generating Storyboard Images to Videos

 Storyboard to Video Creation Prompts...


1. The Storyboard-to-Video Pipeline


"Create a 3x3 storyboard grid for a short video about [insert concept]. Each panel should show a different scene with consistent character design and cinematic composition. Include a brief scene description below each frame."


Feed the entire grid into Seedance 2.0 or Kling as a reference image. The video output matches the storyboard almost exactly.


This is the workflow right now. If you're bad at writing video prompts, this skips that problem entirely. 


2. The Character Reference Sheet


"Create a character reference sheet for [insert character description]. Show front view, side view, and back view with a color palette. Keep proportions and style consistent across all angles."


Upload this as your reference image every time you generate a new clip. Same character, every scene, every video.


Before Images 2.0, you couldn't get consistent multi-angle output from one prompt. Now it works.


3. The Scene-by-Scene Prompt Builder


"I'm making a 60-second AI video about [insert topic]. Break it into 8 scenes. For each scene, generate the frame as an image and include: camera angle, mood, lighting, and a one-line motion description I can use as a video prompt."


It doesn't just describe the scenes. It generates each frame. You get 8 ready-to-animate reference images in one conversation.


4. The Multi-Image Sequence


"Generate 8 connected frames showing [insert character] going through [insert action/journey]. Keep the character identical in every frame. Each frame should be a different moment in the sequence. Cinematic lighting, [insert style]."


This is the new feature. Up to 8 images from one prompt with character and style continuity across all of them.


Stitch them together in Kling or Seedance for a full scene with almost no inconsistency.


5. The Comic-to-Video Pipeline


"Create a 4-panel manga-style comic strip about [insert scenario]. Same character in every panel. Dramatic angles, expressive faces, action lines. No speech bubbles, visuals only."


Take each panel and run it through image-to-video in Kling or Seedance. Each panel becomes a 5-second clip. 6 panels = 30-second animated scene.


Manga creators and anime-style channels are already doing this.


6. The AI Video Style Frame


"Generate one highly detailed cinematic frame of [insert scene description]. Style: [insert style, e.g. Pixar 3D, anime, photorealistic, noir]. This will be used as the visual style reference for an entire AI-generated short film. Make it production quality."


Upload this single frame as a style reference in Runway or Kling. Every clip you generate after this inherits the same look and feel.


One image sets the visual DNA for your entire video.


7. The Multilingual Video Asset Generator


"Create the same scene of [insert scene description] with a text overlay that reads [insert text]. Generate 3 versions: one in English, one in Japanese, one in Spanish. Keep the visual composition identical. Render all text natively and accurately."


One video, three markets. International faceless channels are using this to repurpose the same content across language-specific accounts without redesigning anything.


Source: 

https://www.facebook.com/share/1CoNNYaFCU/



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