LTX 2.3 Prompt Template

LTX 2.3 Prompt Template

If you already know the kind of clip you want but do not want to start from a blank prompt box every time, a reusable prompt template is the practical middle ground.

This page gives you a ready structure for LTX 2.3 prompts, explains what each part should do, and shows how to adapt one template across cinematic, product, and short-form scenes without losing clarity.

  • Built for faster prompt reuse
  • Works well for browser-first testing
  • Easy to adapt scene by scene

What an LTX 2.3 Prompt Template Should Include

A useful prompt template is not a long block of fixed text. It is a reusable structure with enough guidance to keep your scene coherent while leaving room to swap in a new subject, movement, setting, or style.

1

Subject

State who or what the scene is about before you add style words or camera notes.

2

Action

Name the motion or event clearly so the clip has a reason to move.

3

Camera

Add one camera instruction such as slow push-in, side tracking, or fixed frame.

4

Look

Finish with visual tone, lighting, or commercial feel only after the core scene is clear.

Ready-to-Use LTX 2.3 Prompt Template Blocks

Master Template

Reusable base structure

[Main subject] in [setting], [clear action or motion], [camera behavior], [lighting or atmosphere], [visual tone or style], [one detail the viewer should notice].

Product

Commercial template

[Product] on [surface or scene], [product motion or reveal], [camera move], [lighting setup], premium commercial mood, clean background, focus on [hero detail].

Character

Performance template

[Character] in [location], [gesture or action], [camera distance and movement], [lighting feel], cinematic tone, emphasis on [expression or body language].

Short Form

Social clip template

[Object or person] doing [single satisfying action], quick [camera angle or move], crisp lighting, clean background, short-form ad style, attention on [visual payoff].

If you want fully written examples instead of reusable blanks, the best companion pages are prompt examples and best prompts.

How to Adapt One Template for Different Video Goals

1

Keep the structure, swap the nouns

Do not rewrite the whole prompt. Change the subject, setting, and hero detail first while keeping the same order.

2

Change one motion variable at a time

If the output is close, only test one new action or one new camera move so you can see what changed the result.

3

Turn the winners into browser-ready presets

Once a template variant works, save it as a repeatable starting point in aicovea instead of rebuilding the prompt every session.

FAQ

Is a prompt template too generic for good results?

No, as long as the template preserves clear scene logic. The template gives structure; the specificity comes from the subject, action, and visual details you plug into it.

What is the biggest mistake when using a prompt template?

The biggest mistake is treating every field like a style bucket. Start with the main subject and motion first, then add camera and look.

Where should I test a prompt template first?

A browser workflow is usually the fastest starting point because you can iterate on the structure quickly before you commit to a local or developer-heavy setup.

Template Workflow

If you want a cleaner starting point than a blank box, open the template in aicovea, swap in your subject and scene details, and keep the versions that hold up best as reusable prompt presets.