Complete breakdown

Golf Products

A golf product-style commercial breakdown that starts from GPT Image 2 stills, builds a real swing clip in Kling O1, then salvages weaker closeups in CapCut instead of wasting regeneration credits.

This workflow is less about perfect raw generations and more about practical editing judgment: generate the main performance first, extract a useful freeze frame for product closeups, then use velocity-based speed edits to hide weak sections and turn them into a deliberate commercial style.

GPT Image 2Kling O1CapCut

Workflow

  1. 1Start by pairing the real brand logo with one strong generated golfer identity image that locks the outfit, branding, and overall sports-commercial look.
  2. 2Turn the primary identity still into the actual pre-swing commercial frame that will drive the main motion clip.
  3. 3Generate the real golf swing first, because this is the one clip that needs believable performance instead of only frozen-time camera motion.
  4. 4Use the generated main shot to manufacture a better reference source for the closeups instead of trying to invent those closeups from scratch.
  5. 5Generate the branded product-style closeup stills only after the freeze frame exists, so they all inherit the same pose moment and commercial lighting logic.
  6. 6Use Kling O1 to move only the camera between product-detail frames, then pull back out to the wider frozen golf setup.
  7. 7This is the key lesson of the breakdown: keep the good generations, hide the weak moments with velocity edits, and make the result feel intentional instead of broken.
  8. 8Sequence the clips, add text, match the music, and let editorial pacing create the final polish instead of spending more on regeneration.

This direct link includes the complete breakdown and every file promised with the video.

Final montage

15.6 MB • 1440×2560 • 0:07

Breakdown Step

1. Primary reference setup

Start by pairing the real brand logo with one strong generated golfer identity image that locks the outfit, branding, and overall sports-commercial look.

The `logo.png` asset is the real AVM logo reference. It is not generated and is used to keep the shirt and cap branding consistent.

The primary reference image is the first generated still in the pipeline. It establishes the golfer identity, premium outfit styling, tournament atmosphere, and the brand placement rules used later in the workflow.

primary reference image.PNG

primary reference image.PNG

1.9 MB • 1024×1536

Primary reference image prompt

Creates the initial branded golfer identity still in GPT Image 2.

Breakdown Step

2. Main shot image

Turn the primary identity still into the actual pre-swing commercial frame that will drive the main motion clip.

This image is derived from the primary reference image and resets the golfer into a believable pre-swing address pose.

It becomes the start image for the most important generation in the sequence: the main shot video where the real swing motion is introduced.

Main shot image prompt

Creates the pre-swing tee-box still used to start the main shot video.

Breakdown Step

3. Main shot video

Generate the real golf swing first, because this is the one clip that needs believable performance instead of only frozen-time camera motion.

This video was generated before any closeup assets. The goal here was to get the actual swing motion in place and then freeze the scene right before impact.

The main shot generation was the strongest result in the whole sequence, so it becomes the anchor that everything else is built around.

Main shot video prompt

Generates the main swing clip, then freezes the action right before impact.

Breakdown Step

4. Freeze-frame extraction

Use the generated main shot to manufacture a better reference source for the closeups instead of trying to invent those closeups from scratch.

After the main shot video was generated, it was brought into CapCut and cut at roughly the 2-second mark when the club is high in the backswing.

That frame was screenshotted and reused as the new reference image for the closeup generation steps. This reduces variation because the closeups now inherit a real pose from the working clip instead of guessing it again.

main shot video generation freeze frame.png

main shot video generation freeze frame.png

1.5 MB • 728×1304

Breakdown Step

5. Closeup reference images

Generate the branded product-style closeup stills only after the freeze frame exists, so they all inherit the same pose moment and commercial lighting logic.

These images were created after the freeze-frame extraction, using the captured backswing frame as the pose and scene reference.

The T-shirt and cap closeups also use the real logo image where the branding has to stay exact and readable.

T-shirt closeup image

A back-of-shirt branding still built from the freeze frame so the AVM logo can be shown as a product detail shot.

T-shirt closeup image prompt

Creates the close branding shot on the back of the golfer’s shirt.

Cap closeup image

A tight cap-focused still that keeps the AVM logo legible while preserving the frozen backswing context.

Cap closeup image prompt

Creates the tight white-cap branding shot.

Glasses closeup image

An extreme face-and-sunglasses still designed to feel like a premium sports-product detail shot.

Glasses closeup image prompt

Creates the sunglasses and face detail still.

Breakdown Step

6. Closeup and return videos

Use Kling O1 to move only the camera between product-detail frames, then pull back out to the wider frozen golf setup.

These clips were generated after the freeze-frame-based stills were created. Each one is basically a camera-travel shot through a frozen scene.

The idea is to move from broad action into product details, then back out again, so the edit feels like a premium commercial instead of a single sports clip.

T-shirt closeup clip

Travels from the wider frozen golfer view into the back-of-shirt logo detail shot.

tshirt closeup.mp4

8.4 MB • 1076×1924 • 0:05

T-shirt closeup video prompt

Moves the camera from the frozen full-body setup into the shirt branding detail.

Cap closeup clip

Orbits from the shirt-back detail toward the front of the golfer’s face and cap branding.

Cap closeup video prompt

Moves the camera around the frozen golfer toward the cap logo closeup.

Glasses closeup clip

Pushes from the cap closeup into an extreme close view of the sunglasses and lower face.

glasses closeup.mp4

11.7 MB • 1080×1916 • 0:05

Glasses closeup video prompt

Pushes deeper into the frozen face-and-sunglasses detail shot.

Back-to-start clip

Pulls away from the sunglasses detail and returns to the wider frozen golf setup to reconnect the commercial to the core swing moment.

back to start shot.mp4

11.1 MB • 1080×1916 • 0:05

Back-to-start video prompt

Pulls the camera back from the face detail into the full frozen backswing shot.

Breakdown Step

7. CapCut salvage workflow

This is the key lesson of the breakdown: keep the good generations, hide the weak moments with velocity edits, and make the result feel intentional instead of broken.

The main shot generation was usable, but the closeup clips and the back-to-start shot had weak sections that would have cost more credits to fully regenerate.

Instead of throwing those clips away, velocity-based speed effects were added in CapCut so the weak parts move past quickly and read as a stylistic commercial choice.

This is the practical editing move that turns imperfect generations into a usable branded video without restarting the generation pipeline.

main shot (starting) speed graph.png

main shot (starting) speed graph.png

91.8 KB • 916×958

main shot (ending) speed graph.png

main shot (ending) speed graph.png

91.9 KB • 908×958

Notes

  • `access speed settings.png` shows where the CapCut speed controls are accessed before applying the salvage treatment.
  • `main shot (starting) speed graph.png` shows the velocity setup used on the starting side of the main shot so the pacing into the sequence feels deliberate.
  • `closeups speed graph.png` shows the speed treatment used across the weaker closeup generations so broken segments are rushed through stylistically.
  • `main shot (ending) speed graph.png` shows the end-shot setup used to smooth the transition back out of the closeup sequence.

Breakdown Step

8. Final CapCut assembly

Sequence the clips, add text, match the music, and let editorial pacing create the final polish instead of spending more on regeneration.

After the salvage work was done, the clips were pieced together in CapCut, text was added, and matching background audio was layered in to complete the product-commercial feel.

The important lesson is that the finished result comes from editorial pacing and smart salvage choices, not from demanding perfect model output in every clip.

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