TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Seedance 2 for Motion Design Is Insane — Full Workflow Test

10m 3s1,434 mots223 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

Hello everyone. Today, we're building a

0:02

full motion graphics video completely

0:06

from scratch. No motion graphics

0:08

software, none. Just flashboards.

0:12

Please, take a look. You know this idea,

0:14

it's already there in your head. But

0:17

while you piece it together from 10

0:19

different windows as your focus keeps

0:22

getting pulled in every direction, while

0:24

you're chasing fragments instead of the

0:25

whole, it fades. And suddenly, there you

0:29

are, alone, idea gone, head empty,

0:31

emotionally sponsored by chaos. [music]

0:34

Flashboards keeps the idea whole.

0:37

Everything you drop onto the canvas,

0:38

[music]

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references, clips, voice prompts, stays

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right there with it. Nothing gets lost

0:44

between tabs. At the center, a prompt

0:47

box. Everything around it, your process

0:50

[music] laid out the way you think,

0:52

where the idea doesn't fall apart.

0:56

Flashboards, built to create.

1:02

Good news, SeaDance now has a 30%

1:06

discount. So, the price goes from $0.302

1:10

to $0.211.

1:13

Here's the roadmap we're going to

1:14

follow. We'll start with the idea, move

1:17

into references, then build our still

1:20

shots, shape everything into a

1:22

storyboard, bring it to life with

1:24

SeaDance transitions, and finally polish

1:27

it in After Effects or DaVinci. Now,

1:29

let's break it down. We start where we

1:31

always should, the idea. A short script

1:34

to guide us and double as our voiceover.

1:37

Using a few carefully chosen references,

1:39

we begin by selecting the character

1:41

reference, colorful 3D elements, a

1:43

meditation pose, and some icon

1:45

references, a simple prompt, and we get

1:48

our first draft. Good start, but not

1:50

quite there. So, I iterate, reuse the

1:52

result, refine the prompt, better. Next,

1:56

remove everything outside the head.

1:58

Cleaner. Finally, bring in a new

2:00

background reference, combine

2:02

everything, and now scene one is locked.

2:05

So, once you got a concept you liked,

2:07

things get easier to manipulate. Scene

2:10

two, using scene one plus the 3D

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elements reference, I generate the next

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shot with a more detailed prompt. One

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issue, those connecting lines. Quick

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fix, select the result, short prompt,

2:23

gone. From here, the process becomes a

2:25

rhythm. Moving next, we'll select the

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second scene we've just generated, write

2:29

our next prompt,

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and here it is. Moving to the next one,

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same colorful elements reference with a

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new more organized one, a detailed

2:39

prompt, and the first draft is ready.

2:41

Now, building upon the scene we just

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generated, we'll tweak it a little to

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make those elements more organized in a

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grid, and here we go. We keep building

2:50

upon what we already have to maintain

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style consistency. So, moving next,

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selecting what we have, writing a

2:59

detailed prompt, and our next one is

3:01

ready. To make a specific card escape

3:03

the board, we'll select the new scene,

3:05

type a new prompt, and yep, that's it.

3:08

For the next scene, where he's sitting

3:10

at a desk and working relaxed, I'm going

3:12

to select this new reference and our

3:13

main character, then type a detailed

3:15

prompt describing what should happen,

3:17

and Nano Banana 2 did just that. For the

3:19

next one, to make him catch the flying

3:21

media card, I'm going to select what we

3:23

already generated, the card itself, and

3:26

the board the card is escaping from,

3:28

which is the previous scene. With a

3:30

suitable and specific prompt, it's done.

3:33

For the prompt box scene, I'm going to

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select an image of the prompt box in

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Flashboards, our 3D elements again,

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followed by the prompt, and here we go.

3:42

Tweak the result a bit, update the

3:44

prompt, and we have our chosen scene.

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For the next scene, selecting what we

3:48

generated, followed by a previous scene

3:50

to keep the same media cards look dev,

3:53

and a screenshot from a Flashboards

3:55

video we made. And with the right

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prompt, they are all combined perfectly.

4:00

And for the last scene, selecting the

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first scene, describing what's happening

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with a prompt, and it's done. And just

4:08

like that, we have a stylized and

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consistent storyboard ready to be

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animated.

4:14

>> [applause]

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>> Now, before going any further in the

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process, don't forget to upscale all

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your results to 4K for more accurate and

4:26

consistent results with SeaDance 2.

4:29

Moving now to SeaDance 2 and the video

4:31

generation process. First, I made a full

4:34

body shot and a close-up shot of the

4:35

main character to maintain that level of

4:37

texture. Starting by selecting both as

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references along with the first scene,

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type the prompt, and the first scene is

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alive. Since I selected the duration to

4:46

be 15 seconds and the actions [music]

4:48

are simple, you'll notice that the

4:49

result is slow, but we'll fix it later.

4:52

Moving to the second scene now, keep the

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first scene selected since it's going to

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be the start frame, followed by the next

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scene as the end frame, and the close-up

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character shot for texture clarity. Type

5:02

a detailed prompt of what's happening,

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and here we have our second scene.

5:18

Man, look at you. You just elevated the

5:21

whole idea.

5:23

Keeping everything selected, I'm only

5:25

going to update the prompt with a

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shorter description this time. And just

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like that, we have a second variant of

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the same scene, which we can also use.

5:41

Now, a very cool trick to keep

5:42

everything seamless and connected, I'm

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going to select a frame from the end of

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this current scene, upscale it, and use

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it as an input to be the start frame for

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the next scene, then follow it with the

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next scene itself and a short prompt.

5:56

And here we have our next scene starting

5:57

exactly where we left off.

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Repeat the same process by selecting a

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frame from the end of this shot to be

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the start frame for the next one, then

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select the next scene, a short prompt

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again, and here we go.

6:19

>> [music]

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[music]

6:29

>> Get back to a frame we want to start the

6:30

next scene with, followed by the next

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scene, and typing yet another short

6:34

prompt again, here we have it. Notice

6:36

that it's not always a complex or long

6:38

prompt.

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>> [music]

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>> For the next one, to make the media card

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escape the board, I'll select the board

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shot first, followed by the flying card

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shot. Type the prompt, and it's done.

6:59

Let's keep everything selected and

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update the prompt with a shorter one,

7:03

and just like that, we have another

7:05

option to use.

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Notice that it's not always a long or

7:11

complex prompt. Sometimes a short, clean

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one will do the trick.

7:20

Now, for the next shot, I want to make

7:22

things easier for SeaDance 2 to

7:23

understand what's going on much better

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from the first try. So, I will first

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make another pose out of our next scene,

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then another pose in between where the

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media card is trying to get out of the

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monitor. Select all three now for

7:35

SeaDance 2 and type a detailed prompt,

7:38

and there you have it.

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Keeping everything selected and only

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updating the prompt with a shorter one,

7:53

we have another option to use, combine,

7:55

or choose from.

8:05

Moving next, I'll select this scene as a

8:07

start frame and the next one as an end

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frame. Describe what's happening with

8:11

extra details, and we have our first

8:13

try.

8:15

>> [music]

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>> And once more, keeping everything

8:24

selected, update the prompt with a

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shorter version, and there we have a new

8:28

option.

8:38

A complex prompt when I want control, a

8:40

short one when I want variety.

8:43

More options, more directions, and so

8:46

far, it's looking really good. And for

8:48

the final scene, I'll grab it and type a

8:50

prompt to animate it. And there it is.

9:00

From the generated result, I'm going to

9:02

select a frame from the start and make

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    Seedance 2 for… - Transcription Complète | YouTubeTranscript.dev