Home Samples Guide About → Create Video
🇬🇧 English 🇷🇺 Русский 🇨🇳 中文 🇪🇸 Español 🇩🇪 Deutsch 🇫🇷 Français 🇧🇷 Português 🇯🇵 日本語 🇸🇦 العربية 🇰🇷 한국어
// User Guide

How to Use TextToVideo.me

Everything you need to generate stunning cinematic frames from text descriptions — from basic scenes to advanced cinematography prompts.

// Getting Started

Your first cinematic frame

Generating your first frame takes under 60 seconds. No account required. Open the generator, describe what you see in your mind, and click Generate.

  1. Navigate to the Make page
  2. Type your scene in the description field
  3. Choose a visual style (Cinematic is the default)
  4. Select your frame size (1792×1024 is widescreen default)
  5. Click "Generate Frame" and wait 8-12 seconds
  6. Download your cinematic frame
// Your First Prompt

Copy this prompt to get started with a visually rich scene:

"A solitary lighthouse on a rocky Atlantic coast during a winter storm. Dramatic waves crashing against the rocks, lightning in the dark sky, warm light emanating from the lighthouse window."
Style: Cinematic · Size: 1792×1024 · Model: Flux Pro
// Prompt Craft

Writing great scene descriptions

Start with the subject

Lead with the main subject and action: "A detective walking through...", "Two astronauts floating in...", "A village market at...". The subject anchors the scene.

Add time and atmosphere

"At midnight", "at golden hour", "during a monsoon", "in winter fog" — temporal and weather context dramatically changes the mood and lighting.

Describe the light source

Lighting is the most powerful prompt element: "moonlight filtering through clouds", "single spotlight from above", "neon signs casting colored shadows", "candle-lit interior".

Include composition hints

"Wide establishing shot", "close-up", "bird's eye view", "Dutch angle", "over-the-shoulder" — camera terminology directly influences composition.

Specify color palette

"Muted blue-grey tones", "warm amber and gold", "desaturated with red accents", "high contrast black and white" — color grading creates instant mood.

Reference a visual style

"Like a Wes Anderson film", "Stanley Kubrick symmetry", "documentary photography", "Renaissance painting" — style references are powerful shortcuts.

// Style Reference

Choosing the right style

Style Best For Color Profile Mood
Cinematic General scenes, drama, action Rich, color-graded Professional, immersive
Film Noir Mystery, crime, 1940s-50s High-contrast B&W Moody, dark, atmospheric
Animation Fantasy, children's content, stylized Vibrant, saturated Playful, expressive
Photorealistic Nature, documentary, products Natural, accurate Authentic, grounded
Vintage Film Period pieces, nostalgia Film grain, warm cast Historical, romantic
Anime Japanese aesthetic, manga adaptation Cel-shaded, clean lines Expressive, stylized
Documentary Journalism, reportage, portraits Neutral, natural light Raw, honest, immediate

READY TO CREATE?

5 free frames per day. No account needed.

OPEN GENERATOR →