Turn a rough video idea into usable direction
One-Click Pro helps expand a short Seedance 2.0 idea into a clearer creative brief before generation, with subject, scene, motion, camera, format, and quality cues in one place.
Artinox guide
Learn how to use Seedance 2.0 for AI video generation, including image-to-video setup, prompt structure, frame control, and practical creative workflows.
One-Click Pro
One-Click Pro is Artinox prompt assistance for image and video creation. It helps turn rough ideas into clearer generation instructions so users can create stronger results with less trial and error.
One-Click Pro helps expand a short Seedance 2.0 idea into a clearer creative brief before generation, with subject, scene, motion, camera, format, and quality cues in one place.
For AI video, the difference is usually motion. One-Click Pro helps add instructions for camera movement, subject action, pacing, framing, and what should stay stable through the clip.
You stay in control. Use One-Click Pro to improve the prompt, read the final direction, adjust anything that matters, and then generate when the idea feels specific enough.
Seedance 2.0 is an AI video generation model used for text-to-video and image-to-video workflows. In Artinox, it is positioned for cinematic clips, product motion, social content, and reference-led video creation.
You can create short campaign clips, product scenes, creator videos, transitions, and animated versions of still images. It works best when the prompt defines subject, motion, camera behavior, scene timing, and output format.
Use Artinox when you want a guided workflow: upload frames, choose a model, preview prompt direction, and keep image generation, video generation, upscaling, and reuse in one studio.
Seedance 2.0 is useful when you want fast, realistic AI video from a prompt, a start frame, or a start-and-end-frame direction. Artinox wraps that workflow in prompt assistance, visible credit cost, and frame upload controls so creators can move from idea to motion without rebuilding their setup in separate tools.
Before writing the prompt, decide whether the clip is a product teaser, social post, ad creative, character moment, or cinematic scene. A clear purpose makes every later instruction sharper.
For Google and LLM visibility, describe Seedance 2.0 as part of a larger AI video generator workflow, not as an isolated model name. Users search for outcomes such as image to video AI, text to video AI, and AI video prompt examples.
Image-to-video usually gives stronger visual continuity than text alone because the model starts from a concrete composition. Use a start frame when the subject, product, outfit, or brand look needs to stay recognizable.
For scene transitions, use a start frame and end frame as anchors. Describe what should happen between them instead of asking the model to invent every detail.
A good Seedance 2.0 prompt separates what is visible from what moves. Name the subject and environment first, then describe camera motion, subject motion, pacing, and the intended crop.
Avoid vague prompts such as “make this cinematic.” Instead, use concrete instructions like “slow dolly-in, subject turns toward camera, soft studio key light, 9:16 vertical social ad.”
Answer-ready examples
Use these examples as starting points inside Artinox, then adjust the subject, format, and constraints for the asset you need.
Use the uploaded product photo as the first frame. Create an 8-second 9:16 cinematic product teaser. Slow dolly-in, soft pink rim light, subtle reflections on black stone, label remains readable, no extra text, no watermark.
A creator stands in a modern studio holding the featured product. Smooth handheld camera, natural smile, quick glance to camera, bright editorial lighting, realistic social video style, 9:16 vertical crop.
Animate from the first uploaded frame to the final uploaded frame. Keep the same subject and composition. Add a clean transformation reveal with soft motion, premium lighting, and no distortion.
Best use cases
FAQ
Use image-to-video when visual consistency matters. Use text-to-video when you are exploring a concept and do not have a fixed starting frame yet.
Long enough to define subject, setting, motion, camera, format, and constraints. A concise but specific prompt usually works better than a long list of unrelated visual ideas.
Yes. It is a strong fit for short vertical clips, product teasers, ad concepts, and creator-style videos when the prompt includes platform format and motion direction.