HolyCrab AI Video Trends / Answer
Seedance Image-To-Video Prompts
Seedance image-to-video prompts work best when the image has one assigned role, the text adds one motion path, and the review checks whether identity, product shape, or composition stayed stable.
How do you write Seedance image-to-video prompts?
Write Seedance image-to-video prompts by assigning the image one job: identity, product appearance, scene layout, texture, first frame, or final composition. Then write a short motion instruction that explains what changes during the clip, how the camera moves, how long the test should run, and what the final frame must prove. Do not ask the same image to control identity, style, motion, and endpoint all at once unless the job is intentionally simple. For HolyCrab, start with a 4-8 second test, use owned or authorized images, record the reference role, and judge whether the output preserved the image anchor while adding readable motion.
Key takeaways
- Name the image role before writing motion: identity, product shape, texture, scene, first frame, or final frame.
- Use one motion path first, such as push-in, orbit, reveal, unfold, assemble, turn, or app interaction.
- Keep camera and subject movement simple until the image anchor is stable.
- Use first-last-frame pages when the final composition matters as much as the starting image.
- Track drift reason, reference role, rights status, output result, retry count, and conversion event for each HolyCrab image-to-video test.