Seedance Clothing Video Styles Guide
AI Video

2026-06-12

Seedance Clothing Video Styles Guide

Create five clothing video styles with reference images, timeline prompts, model-product fusion, video replacement, storyboard grids, and music-ready edits.

seedanceclothing videofashion ecommercetimeline prompts

Try this workflow in Naviya

Use references when identity, product shape, outfit, or style needs to stay consistent.

Try reference to video

Clothing videos are not one format. A jacket demo, a jersey review, a shoe ecommerce clip, a video replacement edit, and an editorial storyboard sequence all need different prompt structures. Seedance-style workflows are useful because they support reference images, model-product fusion, and time-based prompting, but the creative control still comes from the brief.

This guide breaks down five clothing video styles and the prompt logic behind each one. You can adapt the same structures in Naviya video generator, Naviya image-to-video, or Naviya AI video ads. For broader fashion production, see AI fashion product video workflow and outfit change AI video workflow.

What is a timeline prompt?

A timeline prompt divides a video into time blocks. Instead of asking for a generic "fashion video," it tells the model what happens from 0 to 4 seconds, 4 to 9 seconds, and so on.

Example structure:

[0-04s | Hook] Visual action and spoken line.
[04-09s | Details] Product close-up and selling points.
[09-15s | Fit and vibe] Full-body look, movement, and final impression.

Timeline prompts work well for clothing because shoppers need sequence: first attention, then detail, then fit.

Style 1: Cream coach jacket social review

Positioning: warm retro styling, relaxed layering, social recommendation.

Use when:

  • The product has fabric or collar details.
  • The brand wants an Instagram-style outfit clip.
  • The item is easy to layer.

Prompt:

Create an Instagram-style clothing introduction video for the cream coach jacket
in the reference image, using a relaxed foreign male model in an earth-tone
outfit.

[0-04s | The hook]
The model faces camera in a cozy street or cafe-side setting and says:
"Looking for a solid jacket this season? This cream coach jacket is a great
choice."

[04-09s | The details]
Show the contrast brown corduroy collar, snap buttons, chest embroidery, and
fabric texture. The model adjusts the collar and sleeve naturally while saying:
"The contrast collar gives it a retro feel, with clean snap buttons and subtle
embroidery."

[09-15s | The fit and vibe]
Full-body shot with relaxed layering over flannel. The model walks a few steps
and says: "The relaxed fit makes layering easy. It is a true earth-tone essential."
No text on screen.

Style 2: Vintage jersey TikTok review

Positioning: North American street-sport look, oversized fit, embroidery proof.

Use when:

  • The product has graphic numbers, embroidery, or team-style details.
  • The fit is the selling point.
  • You need a creator-review feel.

Prompt:

Create a North American TikTok-style vintage sports jersey review. Use the
jersey reference as the main clothing product and place it on the model. Choose
simple pants that match the jersey without distracting from it.

[0-04s | On-body hook]
The model wears the jersey and says: "Looking for a classic vintage piece? You
need to see this."

[04-09s | Flat lay and detail]
Cut to close shots of the embroidery, number detail, fabric texture, and collar.
The model says: "The details are clean, and the material feels premium."

[09-13s | Fit]
Return to full-body view. The model turns slightly to show drape and oversized
shape: "The oversized fit has a great drape. You can throw it over almost
anything."

[13-15s | Vibe]
Atmospheric final frame with the model walking away or leaning against a wall:
"A timeless classic with its own vibe."

For UGC ad structure, compare with UGC AI video ad prompts.

Style 3: Shoe-focused ecommerce clip

Positioning: fast marketplace product display, shoe as hero, no captions.

Use when:

  • The shoe is the main product.
  • You need a short shopping clip.
  • Music and movement matter more than spoken copy.

Prompt:

Create a short ecommerce shoe introduction video focused on the sneaker in the
reference image. Use a female fashion model only as styling context. The shoe is
the hero. Include close-ups of the side profile, toe, sole, laces, and on-foot
movement. Use upbeat music rhythm. No subtitles, no text, no unrelated products.

Add product preservation:

Preserve shoe shape, color blocking, logo position, sole thickness, lace
structure, and material texture.

Style 4: Replace product, clothing, and environment in an existing clip

Positioning: rapid iteration from a video reference.

Use when:

  • You have a motion format you like.
  • The product or setting needs to change.
  • You want to test variants quickly.

Prompt:

Use the reference video for motion rhythm and camera path. Replace the shoes in
the video with the shoe reference. Change the character's full outfit to black
clothing that matches the new shoes. Replace the environment with the provided
environment reference. Keep body movement, pacing, and camera rhythm similar.
Preserve natural lighting and realistic interaction with the ground.

Check carefully for mismatched shadows, foot contact, and product scale. Replacement videos can look impressive but need strict review.

Style 5: Nine-panel editorial storyboard video

Positioning: high-end fashion product display with smooth transitions.

First create a 3x3 storyboard image in Naviya image generator:

Photorealistic 3x3 grid storyboard layout, nine equal panels with thin white
borders. The full sequence is a cohesive fashion product showcase in one unified
environment: [describe setting].

Top row:
Panel 1: clothing placed neatly in the environment.
Panel 2: extreme close-up of fabric texture and main logo or embroidery.
Panel 3: macro detail of hardware, zipper, button, or tag.

Middle row:
Panel 4: close worn detail at collar, stitching, or shoulder.
Panel 5: medium shot of model adjusting fit.
Panel 6: full-body hero shot showing silhouette.

Bottom row:
Panel 7: dynamic side-profile movement showing drape.
Panel 8: hands in pockets or cuffs, fabric folds visible.
Panel 9: atmospheric portrait close-up for brand mood.

Consistent lighting, cinematic film grain, high fashion editorial style, no text.

Then animate:

Use the nine-panel storyboard as the shot plan. Create a smooth clothing showcase
video where each panel becomes one scene. Transition cleanly from panel to panel,
match the music rhythm, keep the environment and product consistent, no text.

Try it in Naviya

Build reference stills and storyboard grids in Naviya image generator, then animate selected frames in image-to-video. For paid social versions, use AI video ads to test hook, detail, and fit sequences.

Style selection checklist

  • Use timeline prompts when the video includes spoken selling points.
  • Use shoe-focused prompts when the product must dominate every frame.
  • Use replacement prompts only when motion reference is the main advantage.
  • Use storyboard grids when the brand needs editorial polish.
  • Keep product preservation rules in every style.
  • Remove on-screen text unless it is part of the design plan.

Quick product preservation block

Paste this block under any clothing prompt when product accuracy matters:

Preserve product color, fabric texture, logo placement, embroidery, buttons,
zippers, collar, sleeve length, hem shape, sole shape, and overall silhouette.
The product should look naturally worn or displayed, not pasted on. Do not add
extra logos, slogans, captions, or unrelated accessories.

This block is not glamorous, but it saves results. Clothing videos fail less often when every style prompt includes a product-accuracy layer.

Review order after generation

Review clothing videos in this order: product accuracy, model consistency, motion quality, then music fit. Many creators review motion first because it is exciting, but a smooth clip with a wrong collar or altered shoe is not usable for ecommerce. Product accuracy is the gate.

After that, check whether the person, room, and lighting stay stable. Then check movement. Finally, decide whether the music supports the pacing. This review order keeps the final video useful instead of merely impressive.

Clothing video quality improves when the prompt matches the format. Pick the style first, then write the prompt.