PRODUCT
product
Cosmetics Liquid Splash — Beauty Commercial Shot
A serum bottle hero shot with a controlled liquid splash, framed vertically for Reels. Built around the slow-motion constraint that keeps fluid sims coherent.
Prompt
Create a 7-second 9:16 beauty commercial video in one continuous shot. A frosted glass serum bottle stands centered on a wet reflective surface, soft studio light. A slow-motion crown splash of golden liquid rises around its base and falls. Static camera. Unbranded packaging, no label text. Clean pastel background.
Why this prompt
The liquid-splash bottle shot is the single most recycled composition in beauty
advertising, which makes it a strong test of whether a generated clip can pass as
commercial work. Two documented constraints shape every word here. First,
slow-motion language constrains complex motion: hands-on testing
(digit.in)
found fast complex motion produces artifacts while constrained, slower motion holds
up — and a crown splash is complex fluid motion, so we explicitly slow it. Second,
onscreen text degrades (PixVerse),
so the prompt asks for unbranded packaging, no label text up front rather than
letting the model invent a smeared label you’ll have to reshoot around.
Source tier: 🟡 Pattern-composed (medium confidence — built from documented camera vocabulary and verified failure modes, output not yet video-verified)
The static camera is deliberate: with the splash carrying the motion, a locked-off
frame (static shot is its own documented verb family in the
DeepMind guide) reads as
confidence, and it removes one variable from a shot that already has fluid dynamics
to resolve.
How to tweak
- Colorway:
golden liquid→milky white,rose-pink,deep amber— one color word; matching the splash to brand palette is the fastest way to make it feel bespoke. - Your actual product: upload a product photo and use image-to-video — identity preservation through reference images is the documented pattern (Atlas Cloud). Then keep this prompt’s lighting and splash language as the motion layer.
- Square crop for feed:
9:16→1:1, and bring the bottle slightly closer in the description (fills the lower half of frame). - Calmer variant: replace the crown splash with
slow ripples spreading from the base— for skincare lines whose art direction reads “serene” rather than “impact.” - Add a second turn, not a longer prompt: if you want falling droplets on the bottle afterward, ask for it as a follow-up edit with a “keep the bottle identical” lock instead of stuffing this prompt past the ~50-word focus ceiling (Seaart).
Common failure modes
- Label text will smear. Even “elegant serif label” invites the documented text failure. Generate unbranded, composite your label in post.
- Hands ruin it. A hand placing the bottle is the classic beauty-ad opener and also the classic Omni failure — close-up hand articulation drifts (failure modes). Let the bottle already be in place.
- Two products drift. The documented multi-product problem applies directly: a serum-plus-moisturizer pair shot will drift one of them. One hero per clip.
- Fast splashes smear. If you drop
slow-motion, you’re back in the complex-motion artifact zone. The slow-motion qualifier is load-bearing, not aesthetic.
Notes
- Beauty advertising is heavily regulated in some markets — AI-generated product demonstrations may need disclosure; check your jurisdiction before running as an ad.
- Output carries a SynthID watermark.
- The multi-turn conversational workflow for building this into a 3-shot sequence is covered in the product showcase prompt.
Sources
- Slow vs. complex motion: digit.in hands-on
- Text rendering failure: PixVerse review
- Static camera verb family: DeepMind Gemini Omni prompt guide
- Image-to-video identity: Atlas Cloud features overview
- Prompt length ceiling: Seaart analysis
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