Capabilities/Reference video transitions & camera motion (one-take)

Reference video transitions & camera motion (one-take)

Character & Style Consistency

Refer to all transitions and camera moves in @video1: one continuous shot. Start with a chessboard, pan left to yellow sand on the floor, tilt up to a beach with footprints, a woman in white walking away into the distance. Cut to aerial overhead of waves washing (no people). Seamless transition: waves become flowing curtains. Pull back to girl's face close-up. One-take throughout.

Cited / reported data

Seedance 2.0 keeps characters and visual style consistent across shots, so your multi-shot stories stay coherent. How it works: upload a reference image of your character. The model analyzes facial features, clothing details, and overall visual style, then applies those constraints to every subsequent generation. This means a character's hair color, clothing pattern, and facial structure stay locked even as the scene, camera angle, or lighting changes between shots. When to use this: multi-shot ad campaigns where a model needs to appear in several scenes; product videos where the item must look identical across angles; serialized content like short dramas or episodic brand stories; any project where visual continuity across shots matters more than one-off creative variety. Tips and practical notes: set reference strength between 70–80% for natural-looking results that still allow slight scene-appropriate variation. Keep lighting descriptions consistent across prompts. For product shots, export the highest-resolution reference you have — fine details like text on packaging or stitching patterns are easier to preserve from a sharp source. If you notice drift after several generations, re-anchor by using the original reference image rather than a generated frame.

Across multi-shot work, common issues include characters drifting between shots, product details softening, small text blurring, or scenes losing a unified look. This page focuses on the consistency-related controls often used to reduce those issues and keep faces, clothing, and fine details more stable.

Character & Style Consistency

Reference video transitions & camera motion (one-take)

Learn how Seedance 2.0 locks character faces, outfits, and style across multiple shots using reference images — with e-commerce case study, workflow tips, and FAQ.

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