Focal Length Beauty Editorial

Copy prompt

Create a 15 second ultra photorealistic horizontal 16:9 fashion editorial video.

Main subject: an elegant East Asian woman with long, voluminous, wavy dark hair, wearing a fitted black top, seated on a modern grey sofa in a professional studio. She has a neutral, serious expression, subtle luxury makeup, and refined beauty-editorial styling. The studio is lit with one large soft octabox key light and two large side softboxes, creating premium high end beauty lighting, soft shadows, dimensional face shaping, natural skin texture, and polished cinematic realism.

Core concept: visually demonstrate how different camera focal lengths change face shape, hair volume, and background compression. Keep the same woman, same styling, same pose, same sofa, and same studio throughout the video. The changes should come from the simulated focal length and framing only. Use smooth, elegant transitions and clear educational text overlays.

0–3 seconds: Start with a full shot at 16mm wide angle.
The woman sits centered on the grey sofa. The camera is positioned close enough to create a realistic wide angle effect. Her face looks slightly elongated, her jawline slightly stretched, her hair appears a bit thinner, and the studio background feels expanded and farther away. Display the text "16mm" at the bottom center in a clean, modern white font. Add subtle red arrows highlighting the stretched jawline and the expanded distant background. The shot should feel cinematic and premium, not comedic. Slow, stable camera presence.

3–6 seconds: Create a smooth morph transition from 16mm to 50mm. The framing becomes a natural medium portrait. Her facial proportions now look balanced and flattering, her hair appears fuller, and the background perspective looks more natural and proportionate. Change the text to "50mm" at the bottom center. Use red double arrows to emphasize the improved facial proportions. The transition should be fluid, elegant, and visually satisfying.

6–10 seconds: Transition into a 200mm telephoto portrait. The framing becomes tighter. Her face now appears slightly wider and flatter, her hair becomes more voluminous, almost lion's mane like in shape, and the studio background becomes heavily compressed, feeling closer behind her. Change the text to "200mm" at the bottom center. Add red arrows to highlight the flatter face shape, increased hair volume, and compressed background. Keep everything realistic, polished, and fashion editorial.

10–13 seconds: Create a quick elegant montage cycling through focal lengths: 16mm → 35mm → 70mm → 200mm The woman makes a slow, graceful head turn while her hair moves softly. Each focal length change should visibly alter facial shape, hair fullness, and background depth.
Add elegant white serif text fading in:  "Focal Length = Mood & Shape" The montage should feel stylish, high-end, and educational.

13–15 seconds: End with a final close up at 85mm.
This should be the most flattering shot. Her face looks natural, balanced, and elegant. She gives a subtle soft smile. Remove the arrows and technical overlays, leaving a clean final beauty shot with cinematic color grading and subtle film grain. The final image should feel luxurious, polished, and memorable.

Create a 15 second ultra photorealistic horizontal 16:9 fashion editorial video.

Main subject: an elegant East Asian woman with long, voluminous, wavy dark hair, wearing a fitted black top, seated on a modern grey sofa in a professional studio. She has a neutral, serious expression, subtle luxury makeup, and refined beauty-editorial styling. The studio is lit with one large soft octabox key light and two large side softboxes, creating premium high end beauty lighting, soft shadows, dimensional face shaping, natural skin texture, and polished cinematic realism.

Core concept: visually demonstrate how different camera focal lengths change face shape, hair volume, and background compression. Keep the same woman, same styling, same pose, same sofa, and same studio throughout the video. The changes should come from the simulated focal length and framing only. Use smooth, elegant transitions and clear educational text overlays.

0–3 seconds: Start with a full shot at 16mm wide angle. The woman sits centered on the grey sofa. The camera is positioned close enough to create a realistic wide angle effect. Her face looks slightly elongated, her jawline slightly stretched, her hair appears a bit thinner, and the studio background feels expanded and farther away. Display the text “16mm” at the bottom center in a clean, modern white font. Add subtle red arrows highlighting the stretched jawline and the expanded distant background. The shot should feel cinematic and premium, not comedic. Slow, stable camera presence.

3–6 seconds: Create a smooth morph transition from 16mm to 50mm. The framing becomes a natural medium portrait. Her facial proportions now look balanced and flattering, her hair appears fuller, and the background perspective looks more natural and proportionate. Change the text to “50mm” at the bottom center. Use red double arrows to emphasize the improved facial proportions. The transition should be fluid, elegant, and visually satisfying.

6–10 seconds: Transition into a 200mm telephoto portrait. The framing becomes tighter. Her face now appears slightly wider and flatter, her hair becomes more voluminous, almost lion’s mane like in shape, and the studio background becomes heavily compressed, feeling closer behind her. Change the text to “200mm” at the bottom center. Add red arrows to highlight the flatter face shape, increased hair volume, and compressed background. Keep everything realistic, polished, and fashion editorial.

10–13 seconds: Create a quick elegant montage cycling through focal lengths: 16mm → 35mm → 70mm → 200mm The woman makes a slow, graceful head turn while her hair moves softly. Each focal length change should visibly alter facial shape, hair fullness, and background depth. Add elegant white serif text fading in: “Focal Length = Mood & Shape” The montage should feel stylish, high-end, and educational.

13–15 seconds: End with a final close up at 85mm. This should be the most flattering shot. Her face looks natural, balanced, and elegant. She gives a subtle soft smile. Remove the arrows and technical overlays, leaving a clean final beauty shot with cinematic color grading and subtle film grain. The final image should feel luxurious, polished, and memorable.