Image to Video

How to Use Image to Video on Videoinu

Image to video on Videoinu is a simple way to turn a still image into a moving clip. You upload one image, describe the motion you want, and generate a short video from that starting point. 

Videoinu’s image-to-video workflow supports multiple AI models, and Luma is one of the names that fits naturally here when you want more cinematic camera movement, stronger depth, and a cleaner visual feel.

This can work well for product images, character art, posters, and social content. It can also be a good fit if you want one of the best ways to animate a strong still image without building the whole video from a long text prompt.

How to Use Image to Video on Videoinu

Step 1: Upload a clear image

Start with an image that is easy to read. A clean portrait, product photo, illustration, or simple scene usually works best. Videoinu’s image-to-video page supports common image formats like PNG, JPG, and WEBP, which makes it easy to test different source images quickly.

Step 2: Describe the motion, not the whole image

Your image already shows the subject and layout, so the prompt should focus on movement.

For example:

Image to Video

Slow camera push-in, soft cinematic motion, gentle hair movement, warm light, calm mood.

This usually works better than repeating everything already visible in the image. On Videoinu, the image-to-video flow is built around guiding camera movement, subject motion, and overall style from that starting image.

Step 3: Keep the first motion simple

A small motion idea is usually the best place to start. Try a slow zoom, a soft pan, light wind, or subtle movement in the face or clothing.

This is also where Luma AI fits naturally. On Videoinu, Luma is described as working from text or images and leaning into realistic camera movement, spatial depth, and more cinematic-looking scenes. That makes it a useful model to try when you want an image to video generator with a more polished visual feel, without forcing the article into a model comparison.

Step 4: Generate one short test

Run one version first and check the basics. Does the motion feel natural? Is the camera move too strong? Does the image still look clean once it starts moving?

If something feels off, change one thing at a time. Small prompt edits usually work better than trying to fix everything at once.

Step 5: Try another version

One of the useful parts of image to video is that the same image can lead to more than one result. You might make one version feel cinematic, another feel better for ads, and another feel softer for social content.

Once one short clip works, it becomes much easier to build the next one on Videoinu.

Tips for Better Results

Use an image with one strong subject. Keep the first motion prompt short. Focus on movement, camera feel, and mood instead of repeating the whole image. If you want a cleaner cinematic finish, Luma is a natural model to try in this workflow.

Final Thoughts

The easiest way to use image to video on Videoinu is to start with one strong image and one clear motion idea. Test a short version first, keep the prompt simple, and build from there. If the first clip works, the next version usually gets much easier.