Preserve the portrait
The image step uses the uploaded photo as the identity reference and keeps face, hairstyle, age cues, skin tone, and natural proportions stable.
Upload one portrait and create a World Cup crowd-cam video where the person turns to camera and makes a heart gesture.
Three examples show the intended broadcast feel: centered subject, stadium crowd, subtle turn toward camera, warm smile, and a final heart gesture.
The image step uses the uploaded photo as the identity reference and keeps face, hairstyle, age cues, skin tone, and natural proportions stable.
The person is seated in the stands, facing the pitch, captured from a side broadcast angle in the selected aspect ratio.
The video step keeps the same seat and framing while the person turns to the camera, smiles, and forms a heart with both hands.
Use an adult subject photo that you own or have permission to transform.
Choose a clear face and hairstyle reference so the generated still can preserve identity cues.
Keep 9:16 for vertical social video, or switch to 16:9 in Settings when you need a broadcast-style frame.
Regenerate if the final hands look unnatural or if the face drifts during the smile.
Make a friendly stadium reaction clip that looks like the person was caught by a live sports camera.
Use the turn, smile, and heart gesture as a clean 8-second vertical moment for Reels, TikTok, or Shorts.
Place a creator portrait into a bright World Cup spectator setting without writing a full video prompt from scratch.
Mock up a polished football broadcast atmosphere with crowd depth, stadium lights, flags, and subtle camera movement.
Upload one clear portrait, choose the output frame in Settings, then run the two-step workflow to generate the still and final video in the same aspect ratio.
Use a selfie, headshot, or upper-body photo where the face and hairstyle are easy to read.
Tip: Avoid covered faces or heavy filters when recognizability matters.
The image step creates a seated World Cup spectator shot from a natural side broadcast angle in your selected aspect ratio.
Tip: The person should begin by watching the pitch instead of looking at the camera.
The video step animates the gaze turn, warm smile, and two-hand heart gesture while keeping the same person, seat, and framing.
Tip: Use the same aspect ratio across both steps; the workflow now enforces this automatically.
New video models, motion prompts, and one practical generation idea worth testing - quietly delivered every Friday.