
Zentrix⌚️
@ZentrixHQ • 1,386 subscribers
AI Video • Seedance 2.0 • AI Workflows📽️
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📖THE BEST SEEDANCE 2.0 WORKFLOW STARTS INSIDE CHATGPT IMAGE 2 One creator can now go from storyboard to cinematic short film without a camera, actors, or a production crew Most creators use Seedance 2.0 as a video generator. The real power comes from combining ChatGPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0 into a production pipeline. Here’s the workflow: 1.Create a story idea in ChatGPT. 2.Generate a shot-by-shot storyboard. 3. Build character sheets to lock consistency. 4.Generate every scene in ChatGPT Image 2. 5.Define camera movements and actions. 6.Animate each shot in Seedance 2.0. 7.Stitch the clips together into a finished short film. Why this works: • Consistent characters across scenes • Better storytelling • Precise camera control • Faster iteration • Professional-looking results • One person can do the work of an entire production team Use cases: ⁃Viral AI shorts ⁃YouTube animations ⁃Brand commercials ⁃Educational content ⁃Story-driven ads ⁃Social media content The future of AI video isn’t prompting. It’s building production pipelines. 📥Tomorrow I am sharing a workflow that almost nobody is using but absolutely should be. 🔖 The full breakdown from setup to final export is waiting in the pinned article.
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📖THE STEP MOST CREATORS SKIP IS WHY THEIR AI ANIMATION LOOKS INCONSISTENT Consistency across clips doesn't come from prompting — it comes from the reference image. The pipeline, step by step: ▪ Start with ChatGPT Image 2 — generate a full character design sheet first, not just a single frame. Multiple angles, expressions, and outfit variations in one image keeps the character consistent across every scene ▪ Build a storyboard inside ChatGPT Image 2 as well — define each shot, camera angle, action, and mood before touching Seedance at all. This is the step most people skip and it's the reason clips look disconnected ▪ Define a color palette and lighting mood early — golden afternoon light, soft warm tones, dramatic shadows. Lock those values and repeat them across every prompt ▪ Take each storyboard frame into Seedance 2.0 as the reference image — one frame becomes one clip ▪ Write the Seedance prompt around the character action, not the scene description. The scene is already in the image. The prompt handles motion, camera behavior, and timing ▪ Keep clip duration between 4-6 seconds per shot — shorter clips give more control over pacing and reduce motion drift on character faces ▪ Match camera movement type across consecutive clips — if one shot dollies in, the next should hold or pull back, not dolly again The consistency across these frames comes from the character design sheet, not from luck. Seedance reads the reference image and the prompt together — if the reference is detailed enough, the output stays on-model. This video was created by ALOKXMEHTA 📥 tomorrow: the exact ChatGPT Image 2 prompt structure used to generate a multi-angle character design sheet like this one 🔖One article covers the entire workflow — it is pinned below, do not scroll past it.
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