skills/generate-video/references/veo-prompt-guide.md

4.9 KiB

Veo 3.1 Prompt Guide

Condensed guide for writing effective Veo video generation prompts.

Six Elements of a Video Prompt

1. Subject

The main focus of the scene. Be specific about appearance, position, and scale.

  • "A golden retriever puppy with floppy ears"
  • "A weathered lighthouse on a rocky cliff"
  • "A woman in a flowing red dress"

2. Action / Motion

What moves, how fast, and in what direction. Veo excels with clear motion descriptions.

  • "slowly turns its head to face the camera"
  • "waves crash and recede in rhythmic cycles"
  • "sparks spiral upward from a campfire"
  • "traffic flows through rain-slicked streets"

Motion keywords: slowly, rapidly, gently, explosively, drifting, swirling, pulsing, flowing, cascading, flickering

3. Style / Aesthetic

Visual treatment and artistic direction.

  • "cinematic film grain, desaturated color palette"
  • "Studio Ghibli hand-painted animation style"
  • "hyper-realistic 8K footage"
  • "neon-lit cyberpunk aesthetic"

When using --style, the promptHints are prepended automatically. Layer additional style cues on top.

4. Camera Motion

How the virtual camera moves. Veo responds well to explicit camera direction.

  • Static: "locked-off shot", "tripod shot"
  • Pan: "camera slowly pans left to right"
  • Tilt: "camera tilts up to reveal the sky"
  • Dolly: "camera dollies forward through the corridor"
  • Orbit: "camera orbits around the subject at eye level"
  • Crane: "crane shot rising from ground level"
  • Tracking: "camera tracks alongside the running figure"
  • Zoom: "slow zoom into the subject's eyes"
  • Handheld: "slight handheld camera movement"
  • Aerial/Drone: "aerial drone shot sweeping over the landscape"

5. Composition

Framing, depth, and spatial arrangement.

  • "close-up shot", "wide establishing shot", "medium shot"
  • "shallow depth of field with bokeh background"
  • "symmetrical composition centered on the subject"
  • "foreground elements frame the distant subject"
  • "rule of thirds with subject on the left"

6. Ambiance / Audio

Lighting mood and sound design. Veo 3.1 generates native audio, so audio cues in the prompt influence the soundtrack.

Lighting:

  • "golden hour warm light", "blue hour twilight"
  • "dramatic chiaroscuro lighting", "soft diffused overcast"
  • "neon glow reflecting off wet surfaces"
  • "flickering candlelight", "harsh midday sun"

Audio cues:

  • "gentle piano melody in the background"
  • "birds singing, leaves rustling in the wind"
  • "deep bass rumble with industrial metal sounds"
  • "rain pattering on a tin roof"
  • "crowd murmuring, distant traffic"
  • "complete silence with occasional water drips"

Negative Prompts

Use --negative to specify what to avoid. Effective negative prompts:

  • "blurry, low quality, distorted faces, text overlays"
  • "shaky camera, rapid cuts, jarring transitions"
  • "watermark, logo, border, letterbox"
  • "unrealistic motion, morphing artifacts"

Image-to-Video Tips

When using --input with a starting frame:

  1. Match aspect ratio - The input image MUST match the video aspect ratio. A square image fed to 16:9 video produces black pillarboxing. Generate the starting frame at --aspect 16:9 (or 9:16 for vertical) to match the target video.
  2. Describe the motion, not the image - The image provides the visual; the prompt should describe what happens next
  3. Match the style - If the starting frame has a specific art style, mention it so Veo maintains consistency
  4. Start subtle - Small, natural movements work better than dramatic transformations
  5. Reference elements - "The figure in the center slowly raises their hand" anchors motion to visible elements

Good image-to-video prompts:

  • "The clouds drift slowly across the sky, light shifts from warm to cool"
  • "The character blinks and turns their head slightly to the right"
  • "Water begins to flow down the rocks, mist rises gently"

Avoid:

  • "Transform this into a completely different scene" (too much change)
  • "Add a person walking" (adding new major elements is unreliable)
  • Prompts that contradict visible elements in the starting frame

Prompt Length

  • Sweet spot: 2-4 sentences covering subject, action, and 2-3 additional elements
  • Too short: "A cat" (no motion, no style, no camera direction)
  • Too long: Overly detailed prompts can confuse the model; prioritize clarity over exhaustiveness

Complete Example

Prompt: "A majestic bald eagle soars through a misty mountain valley at dawn. The camera tracks alongside as the eagle banks right, sunlight catching its white head feathers. Cinematic shallow depth of field with fog-covered peaks in the background. Wind rushing sounds with distant eagle call."

Negative: "blurry, text, watermark, unrealistic wing movement"

This covers all six elements: subject (eagle), action (soars, banks), style (cinematic), camera (tracking), composition (shallow DOF), ambiance (dawn mist, wind sounds).