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    Image to Video

    Image to Video

    Use Image to Video on FreeGPT2 to turn still images into motion, then refine and export video results in one workspace.

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    Veo 3.1
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    Seed
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    Image To Video

    What is Image to Video?

    Image to Video starts from a still frame and pushes it into motion. Use it when the composition, product layout, poster frame, portrait, or illustration already exists and the next job is to animate it without throwing away the original direction. On FreeGPT2, you can move the same reference image across Kling 3.0, Veo 3.1, Seedance 2.0, Wan 2.7, and Grok Imagine, which makes it easier to compare how different models preserve structure, camera feel, and motion intensity.

    Action sports

    Mountain road skateboard jump turned into ultra-slow action

    Why use Image to Video here

    01Featured

    Keep the frame you already approved

    Image to Video is stronger than text-to-video when the first frame is already the creative decision. Start from the approved visual and extend it into motion instead of asking a model to rebuild the scene from scratch.

    02

    Compare motion behavior on the same image

    Run one reference through multiple models and see which one keeps the layout, product shape, character look, or poster composition closest to the original while still adding useful motion.

    03

    Refine movement without rebuilding context

    Reference image, motion prompt, duration, and previews stay in one place, so the next round starts from a known frame instead of a new guess.

    From YouTube

    Image to Video YouTube Videos

    Reference clips and walkthroughs that help you judge how much motion can be added while the original frame still reads clearly.

    YouTubeYouTube · Kling AI
    Kling

    Kling feature launch for Image to Video and video extension

    A useful starting point for seeing how Kling positions still-image animation, extension, and longer clip workflows.

    YouTubeYouTube · Kling AI
    Kling

    Official Kling Image to Video examples

    See how much motion can be added while the frame still feels like the original image.

    YouTubeYouTube · Data Science in your pocket
    Kling Demo

    Simple Kling Image to Video prompt test on one reference frame

    Helpful when you want a less polished demo that focuses on what a single image and one prompt can realistically produce.

    YouTubeYouTube · JSFILMZ
    Seedance

    Seedance 2.0 Image to Video example pass

    Useful for comparing a newer model’s motion style, continuity, and how much cinematic finish it can add to a still frame.

    YouTubeYouTube · Prompt Theory
    Veo

    Made with Google Veo 3.1 | Text and Image To Video

    A more reliable creator example for seeing Veo 3.1 used in a mixed text-and-Image to Video workflow with clearer motion tests.

    From X

    Image to Video on X

    Community examples are useful for seeing how one approved frame can be pushed into a more finished moving shot.

    How to Use Image to Video

    Pick a model, describe what you want, and preview the result in the same workspace.

    1. 1

      Choose the image that should define the shot

      Use a frame with the composition, subject placement, and visual direction you actually want to preserve. Image to Video works best when the still image is already a strong creative anchor.

    2. 2

      Describe motion, not just atmosphere

      Write how the subject should move, how the camera should move, what should stay stable, and what should evolve. If you only describe mood, the result often adds generic motion instead of intentional movement.

    3. 3

      Match the model to the kind of control you need

      Kling 3.0 is useful when prompt-led control and motion feel matter, Veo 3.1 when you want cleaner cinematic output, Seedance 2.0 when continuity matters, and Wan 2.7 when you need a lower-cost structural pass.

    4. 4

      Keep the first pass short, then refine from the winning frame

      Use the shortest duration that can prove the direction, compare results, and only lengthen or restyle once you know which motion behavior is worth keeping.

    What You Can Do with Image to Video

    Best used when the visual direction already exists and the real task is to animate it, compare motion strategies, and keep the same frame language across revisions.

    • 01

      Image to Video for product motion and launch visuals

      Start from a product still, campaign visual, or packshot and turn it into motion without losing the approved composition or lighting direction.

    • 02

      Image to Video for posters, covers, and key art

      Animate static marketing art into short moving scenes that keep the same frame language, which is useful when the layout is already decided but the output needs more life.

    • 03

      Image to Video for portraits and character continuity

      Move a portrait or character frame into motion while keeping identity, framing, and overall design closer to the original than a prompt-only workflow usually can.

    Image to Video or text-to-video?

    Both workflows stay in the same workbench. The right choice depends on whether the first frame is already decided.

    Use Image to Video when
    • →You already have a strong still frame, poster, portrait, or product shot
    • →The layout or first frame is the part you must preserve
    • →You want motion variation without rebuilding the scene from scratch
    • →Consistency matters more than broad visual exploration
    Switch to text-to-video when
    • →You only have an idea and no approved frame yet
    • →You want to explore multiple scene directions quickly
    • →The first frame should be discovered, not preserved
    • →The prompt needs to define both the look and the motion from zero

    FAQ

    Common questions, answered.

    01

    What kinds of images work best with Image to Video?

    Image to Video works best with portraits, product shots, posters, key art, illustrations, and scene frames that already have a strong composition. The stronger the starting frame, the more useful Image to Video becomes.

    02

    Which models can I use with Image to Video?

    You can compare Kling 3.0, Veo 3.1, Seedance 2.0, Wan 2.7, and Grok Imagine in the same Image to Video workflow. The real difference is how each model handles structure preservation, motion intensity, and camera behavior from the same frame.

    03

    How should I write an Image to Video prompt?

    Start from motion and camera instructions, not from visual description alone. The image already defines composition and styling, so the prompt should explain how the frame should evolve over time.

    04

    When is Image to Video better than text-to-video?

    Use Image to Video when the first frame, product layout, or character look is already correct and consistency matters. Text-to-video is better for exploration; Image to Video is better for preserving a chosen direction.

    05

    Do I need more than one image?

    Usually one strong starting frame is enough. Some models can accept more than one image or an end frame, but the main goal is still to preserve the original visual anchor while adding motion.

    Models available for Image to Video

    Kling 3.0→Veo 3.1→Seedance 2.0→Wan 2.7→Grok Imagine Video→
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    • Save outputs to your library
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