Subject
Define the main object, character, or environment so the prompt has a stable center of gravity.
LTX 2.3 Prompt Builder
This LTX 2.3 prompt builder is for users who want structure before style. Instead of improvising one long sentence, you can lock the scene blocks that actually matter, then copy the result into a browser workflow.
That makes the page useful for both first drafts and repeatable testing. The goal is not to sound clever. The goal is to create a prompt that survives revision.
Use the builder below to lock the scene in the right order, then copy the output into AICovea. The structure is the point. It keeps your subject, motion, camera, and finish from collapsing into one vague sentence.
Built Prompt
This page is intentionally structured like a prompt builder, not a black-box prompt writer. It helps you keep the scene readable before you start iterating.
A useful prompt builder does not begin with adjectives. It begins with scene logic. Once the viewer can tell what the shot is about, style language becomes easier to control and easier to replace.
Define the main object, character, or environment so the prompt has a stable center of gravity.
Name the behavior directly. Motion language should explain what changes in the shot, not just how the result should feel.
Use camera and finish cues to shape the output after the scene itself already reads clearly.
If you want more automated starter ideas, use the prompt generator. If you need examples to adapt, go to prompt examples or the more specific text to video prompts page.
Luxury watch centered on a matte pedestal, slow rotation, close orbit camera, crisp edge lighting, premium launch-film finish.
Young violinist holding eye contact with camera, subtle head turn, soft push-in, warm concert-hall glow, intimate cinematic portrait feel.
Remote mountain road at sunrise, light fog moving across frame, aerial glide camera, warm gold haze, polished travel-film mood.
Related Guides
A prompt builder helps you assemble the scene parts in a deliberate order. A prompt generator often implies automatic writing. This page is about control first.
Because it keeps the scene logic intact when you start making variations. That makes side-by-side prompt testing faster and less messy.
Yes. The same structure works for both. You just keep image-to-video prompts more faithful to the source frame and let text-to-video prompts invent more of the shot.