Seedance 2.0 Prompt Writing Guide
Write clearer prompts for Seedance 2.0 with a practical framework for subject, motion, camera, style, and constraints.
Seedance 2.0 gets better when your prompt behaves like a shot brief, not a bag of adjectives. The most useful mental model is:
- subject
- action
- camera
- style
- constraints
That order matters because the model needs to know what the shot is about before it can decide how the shot should move or look.
The working framework
| Layer | What it answers | Good examples |
|---|---|---|
| Subject | What must stay recognizable? | perfume bottle, creator talking to camera, red coupe at night |
| Action | What is actually happening? | rotates slowly, opens the box, walks toward camera |
| Camera | How should the shot move? | slow dolly-in, side tracking shot, controlled orbit |
| Style | What should it feel like? | luxury studio lighting, soft daylight, blue-hour realism |
| Constraints | What must not happen? | no logo distortion, no extra fingers, no shaky camera |
A strong Seedance prompt pattern
Use this as your default pattern:
[subject], [single action], [camera move], [style and lighting], [constraints]Example:
@Image1 skincare jar, creamy texture smear beside the jar, soft push-in, clean daylight beauty set, premium minimal look, no dirty background no label blur no packaging warpWhat good prompts do differently
They describe one shot
Weak prompt:
A creator unboxes a product, talks about it, shows the details, then cuts to lifestyle footage and a final hero shotBetter prompt:
@Image1 creator opens the box on a desk, subtle overhead-to-front angle transition, natural creator lighting, social-first pacing, no hand deformation no box warpThe second prompt is easier to render because it asks for one coherent visual event.
They choose one camera instruction
The quickest way to make Seedance unstable is to ask for:
- orbit
- zoom
- whip pan
- rack focus
- handheld
all in the same shot.
Pick the dominant move first. Add more complexity only after the simple version works.
They protect the fragile parts
If the shot depends on any of these, name them explicitly:
- label readability
- hand anatomy
- face identity
- wheel, watch, or bottle geometry
- reflections and transparent surfaces
The model cannot protect what you never tell it to protect.
How to write by mode
Text to Video
Use text-to-video when you are exploring an idea rather than preserving a specific asset.
Best pattern:
- lead with subject
- keep the action physical
- keep the camera language simple
- define lighting and tone clearly
Example:
Lone runner in a rain-soaked neon alley, side tracking shot, fast controlled pace, reflective puddles, cinematic red and teal contrast, no shaky camera no extra limbs no text watermarkImage to Video
Use image-to-video when the first frame, product silhouette, or composition already exists and you want motion to grow out of it.
Best pattern:
- reference the uploaded image early
- describe one motion layer
- avoid changing the object identity mid-shot
Example:
@Image1 sneaker center frame, slow 180 rotation, soft side rim light, clean commercial shadow floor, no sole deformation no lace chaos no duplicate shoeReference to Video
Use reference-to-video when consistency matters more than creative range.
Best pattern:
- define what must stay fixed
- add only one motion instruction after the stability rule
- keep pose and scene change limited
Example:
@Image1 creator identity remains consistent, holds the product at chest level, subtle push-in, natural indoor daylight, social review style, no face drift no finger artifacts no product disappearanceNegative prompts are not optional
Negative prompts are where you stop the most common failure modes before they start.
Use them to block:
- anatomy errors
- text artifacts
- geometry drift
- jitter
- unwanted duplicate objects
- messy transitions
Negative prompt examples by use case
Ecommerce
no logo distortion, no text artifacts, no packaging collapse, no duplicate productUGC
no extra fingers, no face drift, no lip mismatch, no background warpingCinematic
no shaky camera, no object melting, no random text, no muddy lightingPrompt iteration rules that save time
Rule 1: change one major variable per pass
If a result fails, choose one of these to change:
- prompt wording
- reference choice
- camera instruction
- duration
- aspect ratio
Do not change all of them together.
Rule 2: shorten before you complicate
If the shot is unstable, shorten the scope:
- fewer actions
- fewer props
- simpler move
- tighter frame
Shorter prompts are not always better, but narrower shots almost always are.
Rule 3: use the prompt to decide the mode
If your prompt keeps mentioning “same face”, “same bottle”, “same outfit”, or “same shape”, that is usually a signal to switch out of text-only generation.
Prompt examples by goal
Product hero shot
@Image1 beverage bottle, cold condensation across the glass, slow heroic push-in, sharp cool highlights, premium beverage ad tone, no label blur no cap drift no warped glassCreator review
@Image1 creator speaking directly to camera, subtle hand gesture with product in frame, soft ring-light catchlight, authentic UGC pacing, no finger artifacts no eye drift no shaky framingCinematic teaser
Dark warehouse interior, flashlight beam motivates a slow pan reveal, suspended dust, suspense tone, high contrast cinematic lighting, no random text no object melting no flat blacksThe standard to keep
A strong Seedance prompt should make it obvious:
- what the viewer should notice first
- what the camera is doing
- what visual mood the shot lives in
- what failure modes are unacceptable
If the prompt does not answer those four questions, it still needs work.
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