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Video GenerationKling
KlingPixio video systemBuilt for directed motion

Kling

Kling video: text-to-video, image or frames to video, effects, extend, and motion control. Multiple variants (V2.6, V3, O3 Standard/Pro) for different quality and speed needs.

Pixio read

This model gets stronger as the shot becomes more explicit. Give it a subject, a move, a frame, and a mood so the output feels directed instead of guessed.

Open in PixioStudy the workflow

Best results start with a directed prompt or a strong first frame.

Why creators use it
Strong first frames win
Camera language matters
Built for short-form motion
Text
Direction-first input
Frame
Reference-ready control
Extend
Workflow behavior
Short-form
Production fit
Pixio briefing

How to get the best out of Kling

Text to Video
Best when you want to direct the whole shot from language.
New scenes, camera intent, atmosphere-first ideation.
Reference Control
Best when the first frame or reference look needs to stay locked.
Keyframes, product shots, character continuity, style anchoring.
Extend
Best when the clip already works and you want more control instead of a reroll.
Continuations, polish passes, cleanup, stronger finals.
Basic Info

Kling on Pixio supports text-to-video, image or frames to video, first + last frame, extend, and effects. Variants (V2.6, V3, O3 Standard/Pro) give you different quality and speed—from quick drafts at 720p to 1080p with optional native audio and precise frame control.

Kling

Kling on Pixio supports text-to-video, image or frames to video, first + last frame, extend, and effects. Variants (V2.6, V3, O3 Standard/Pro) give you different quality and speed—from quick drafts at 720p to 1080p with optional native audio and precise frame control.

Use this when

  • You need high-quality video from a text prompt or a single keyframe.
  • You want first and last frame control (two images + prompt) so the model animates between your chosen start and end—Pro mode.
  • You need extend to lengthen a clip without changing the start, or effect presets (e.g. cinematic, stylized) in one tool.
  • You want native audio in Pro mode (where supported; note: audio and last-frame control are often mutually exclusive).

Modes in Pixio

ModeInputBest for
Text to videoPrompt onlyScenes from scratch, quick drafts
Image to videoOne image + promptAnimating keyframes, storyboards
First + last frameTwo images + prompt (Pro)Controlled motion between two keyframes; precise start and end
ExtendExisting clipLengthening a clip without changing the start
EffectsImage + effect presetStylized or cinematic one-click looks

Options

OptionValuesNotes
Duration5s, 10sStart with 5s for drafts; 10s for finals
Aspect ratio16:9, 9:16, 1:116:9 is default; use 9:16 for portrait, 1:1 for square
QualityStandard (720p), Pro (1080p)Pro adds first+last frame and optional native audio
AudioOn / Off (Pro only)When on, last-frame control may be unavailable—check Pixio UI

Learn in the Academy

Step-by-step lessons, hands-on prompts, and a quiz to master Kling.

Open course

Use in Pixio

Open Pixio Generate and try Kling right now.

Open Generate
Quick reads
Strong first frames win
Camera language matters
Built for short-form motion
Options and credits
Prompting
Directed shot language
Subject, action, camera, environment, lighting, style.
Iteration
Short passes first
Tighten rhythm before spending on finals.
Reference
Optional
Reference frames help when identity and composition must survive.
Practical playbook
Use these heuristics to get cleaner, more controllable outputs without wasting runs.
PreviousHunyuan Video / Motion / Custom / Avatar
NextKling Create Voice
Prompt architecture
Build the output like a creative brief.
[Subject] + [Action] + [Camera Movement] + [Environment] + [Lighting] + [Style]
Prompt demo
A runner turns into a rain-soaked alley, camera tracking low beside them, reflected neon in the puddles, late-night city atmosphere, cinematic contrast, tense and propulsive pacing.

A strong video prompt gives the scene a subject, a move, camera behavior, and a mood to hold onto.

Modes and controls
Direct the whole scene
Text to Video

Start from language and push for camera intent, pacing, atmosphere, and shot design in one move.

Credits

Credits depend on variant (Standard vs Pro), duration, and whether audio is enabled. Pro costs more per second than Standard. Check the model card in Pixio for current rates.

First + last frame control

In Pro mode you can supply two images—a first frame and a last frame—plus a prompt. Kling animates the transition between them, so you control both the opening and closing shot while the model fills the motion in between. Use this when you have two keyframes from a storyboard or when you need a precise start and end (e.g. character starts looking left, ends looking right). Note: in some backends, enabling audio disables last-frame control; choose one or the other per clip.

Prompt structure

[Scene] + [Motion] + [Camera] + [Mood/style]

Describe what we see, how it moves, and the feel. One clear sentence works best.

Example prompts

Nature:

"Waves roll onto a sandy beach at sunset. Slow motion, water foaming at the shore. Camera static. Peaceful, golden hour lighting, warm tones. No fast cuts—one continuous, meditative shot."

Product:

"A sleek smartphone sits on a white marble surface. Camera slowly orbits around it, revealing the design from multiple angles. Soft studio lighting highlights the edges and glass back. Minimalist, professional, high-end product photography style."

Narrative:

"A woman in a red coat walks through a rainy city street at night. Camera follows from behind at a steady pace. Neon signs reflect on wet pavement; streetlights glow in the mist. Cinematic, moody, film-noir atmosphere."

When to use Kling vs other models

ScenarioBest choice
First + last frame control, 1080p, optional audioKling (Pro)
Quick draft, lower costKling (Standard) or Gen-4 Turbo
Cinema-grade, multi-shot consistency from one referenceSeedance 2 Pro
Video-to-video restyleGen-4 Aleph or Grok Imagine
Talking head / lip-syncFabric, Character 3, or OmniHuman
4K upscaleGen-4 Upscale

Tips

  • Use first + last frame when you have two keyframes and want the model to fill the motion in between—Pro only.
  • Start with 5s and Standard for iteration; move to 10s and Pro for final quality and resolution.
  • One clear motion per prompt—avoid mixing too many camera and subject actions in one sentence.
  • Keyframe quality matters—clear composition and lighting in your image improve output consistency.

For full step-by-step lessons and quizzes, see the Kling course in the Academy.

1

Start with a strong first frame when consistency matters more than surprise.

2

Keep each prompt focused on one primary motion direction.

3

Use shorter runs for iteration, then scale up for finals.

4

For narratives, structure the idea as Shot 1 / Shot 2 / Shot 3 instead of one flat blob.

Lock the look first
Reference Motion

Start from a frame or reference when consistency matters more than improvisation.

Keep the motion usable
Extend

Continue or refine the clip without throwing away the visual language you already established.

Text
Direction-first input
Frame
Reference-ready control
Extend
Workflow behavior
Short-form
Production fit
Best use cases
1

Kling works well when the prompt needs motion, framing, and visual direction, not just subject matter.

2

Use it for sequences that need a strong first frame, continuity, or a clearly controlled camera idea.

3

Treat each generation like a shot brief instead of a loose caption to get more cinematic outputs.

Pixio workflow
Step 01
Anchor the shot

Start with either a directed text brief or a strong frame, depending on how locked the look already is.

Step 02
Direct the move

Write the motion like a director: subject, action, camera behavior, environment, lighting, and tone.

Step 03
Scale to finals

Iterate fast on shorter runs, then move to stronger finals once the rhythm feels right.

Best paired with
Nano Banana Pro

Use it to build a stronger first frame, then hand that frame to the video model for motion and continuity.

Pixio utilities

Pair it with frame extraction, merge tools, or image prep so the motion workflow stays clean end to end.