DRONE
drone
Real Estate Aerial Orbit — Listing Hero Shot
A slow drone-style orbit around a property at golden hour, structured for listing videos. Uses the orbit verb family plus an explicit subject lock.
Prompt
Create a 10-second 16:9 cinematic video in one continuous shot. Slow aerial orbit around a modern two-story house with large windows, set on a landscaped lot at golden hour. Warm interior lights glowing. The camera circles the house at roofline height while the scene stays still. 35mm film, soft warm palette.
Why this prompt
The orbit is the listing-video workhorse: it shows massing, lot context, and lighting
in one move. Omni has a documented verb family for exactly this —
orbit around / slow orbit / circle the subject — per the
DeepMind prompt guide,
and the guide’s companion advice of pairing the orbit with a stillness instruction
(while the scene stays still) is what keeps the house rigid while the camera moves.
That lock matters more for architecture than for any other subject: buildings that
warp mid-orbit are instantly noticeable in a way a drifting cloud never is.
Source tier: 🟡 Pattern-composed (medium confidence — built from documented camera vocabulary and verified failure modes, output not yet video-verified)
Golden hour with interior lights on is the classic listing-photography setup, and it also plays to the model’s strengths: strong directional light and window glow give the orbit continuous visual change without requiring any subject motion — the shot stays in the “simple motion” zone that hands-on tests (digit.in) found reliable.
How to tweak
- Property type: swap the subject line —
a Mediterranean villa with a pool,a downtown glass condo tower(orbit at mid-height, not roofline, for towers). - Season staging: append
light dusting of snow on the rooforautumn maples in the yard— one seasonal cue, not three. - Twilight version:
golden hour→dusk, deep blue sky, interior lights dominant. The blue-hour listing look is one word-swap away. - Half-orbit for pacing:
slow 180-degree sweep aroundreads calmer than a full circle in 10 seconds; full360 orbitcan feel rushed at this duration. - Reverse the motion: orbits in both directions are documented; pick the direction that puts the best facade at the end of the move, not the start.
Common failure modes
- Don’t put an address, sign, or “FOR SALE” board in the prompt. Onscreen text degrades — letters smear and warp (PixVerse review). Overlay listing details in post instead.
- Skip the people on the lawn. Staging figures walking to the door adds articulated humans for no listing value; the empty-house convention works in your favor here.
- One building, not a streetscape. Like the multi-product drift documented for product shots, asking the orbit to keep three buildings coherent is asking for geometry drift — isolate the hero property.
- Real properties need a reference image. A text-only prompt produces a house, not your house. For an actual listing, upload a photo of the property — image-to-video preserves identity far better than description (Atlas Cloud) — then apply this orbit language on top.
Notes
- For marketing use, disclose AI generation per your jurisdiction’s advertising rules — especially for real listings, where a generated exterior that diverges from reality is a misrepresentation problem, not just an aesthetic one.
- Output carries a SynthID watermark.
- Same motion family, different subject: the FPV canyon flythrough covers the push/reveal end of aerial vocabulary.
Sources
- Orbit verb family and stillness pairing: DeepMind Gemini Omni prompt guide
- Text rendering failure: PixVerse hands-on review
- Image-to-video identity preservation: Atlas Cloud features overview
- Simple vs. complex motion: digit.in hands-on
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