Consistent characters in AI video: a practical guide
Keep characters consistent across AI video shots with stronger references, prompt anchors, wardrobe rules, shot planning, and a repeatable OmniArt workflow.

Consistent characters in AI video come from controlling identity before you ask for motion. A long prompt cannot rescue a weak reference portrait, conflicting wardrobe notes, or a scene that changes five variables at once. The reliable workflow is to create a small identity system, use it in every shot, and change only what the story needs.
OmniArt gives you several reference-capable video models in one workspace. PixVerse V6 and C1 accept reference images, Seedance 2.0 supports richer reference sets, Kling supports reference-led workflows, and Grok Imagine offers reference options for short clips. The model matters, but the reference package matters more.
Build a character anchor first
Create one approved portrait with:
- a clear, unobstructed face;
- neutral expression and even light;
- visible hair shape and color;
- a simple, repeatable outfit;
- no motion blur, filters, or extreme lens distortion;
- enough resolution to preserve small identity features.
Add a second image only when it contributes new information, such as a full-body view or side profile. Ten inconsistent portraits create more ambiguity than one strong anchor.
Mẹo
Use the same character image across every shot in a sequence. Do not regenerate the reference between scenes unless the story intentionally changes age, wardrobe, or appearance.
Write an identity block
Keep a short description that remains unchanged in every prompt:
Mara, a woman in her early thirties with a blunt black bob, amber eyes, a small scar through the left eyebrow, and a plum wool coat with brass buttons.
This block should describe visible, repeatable traits. Avoid personality labels such as “mysterious” or “confident” inside the identity block; place performance direction after it.
Separate identity from the shot
Use a four-part prompt:
- Identity anchor — the unchanged character block.
- Performance — one action and one emotional beat.
- Environment — location, time, weather, and key props.
- Camera — shot size, angle, movement, and light.
Example:
Mara, a woman in her early thirties with a blunt black bob, amber eyes, a small scar through the left eyebrow, and a plum wool coat with brass buttons. She hears a train arrive and turns toward the light, surprised but still. Medium close-up under a station canopy at blue hour. Slow push-in, warm train light from frame right, cool ambient shadows.
Change one continuity variable at a time
Identity drift rises when the model must change wardrobe, location, emotion, camera, and action together. Plan adjacent shots so they share at least two visual anchors. A wide station shot can cut to a medium shot in the same coat and light before the story moves elsewhere.
For a wardrobe change, create an approved still of the same character in the new outfit first. Then use that still as the next sequence anchor.
Pick the model by reference need
| Need | Start with |
|---|---|
| One to seven visual anchors and multi-shot control | PixVerse V6 |
| Image, video, and audio references in one directed brief | Seedance 2.0 |
| Controlled short action from references | PixVerse C1 |
| Cinematic physical performance | Kling O3 |
| Short reference-led social scenes | Grok Imagine |
Draft the shot in V6 before moving to a higher-cost variant. If the face holds but the movement fails, change the action prompt rather than replacing the identity image.
Common causes of character drift
- Conflicting references: hair, age, makeup, or clothing differs across inputs.
- Overloaded prompts: several actions compete within one short clip.
- Extreme camera changes: tiny faces in wide shots give the model less identity detail.
- Unstable lighting: hard colored light hides the features you want preserved.
- New wording every shot: synonyms accidentally change age, body type, or styling.
- In-scene transformation: asking for costume or age changes invites identity reconstruction.
A repeatable shot workflow
- Approve the character portrait and identity block.
- Generate a medium, low-motion shot first.
- Save the best frame as an additional continuity reference.
- Build the next shot with the same identity block and reference.
- Increase motion only after the face and wardrobe remain stable.
- Review face, hands, accessories, and costume at the start, middle, and end.
Cảnh báo
Character consistency does not grant likeness rights. Use people you have permission to depict, and do not create misleading endorsements or impersonations.
Getting started on OmniArt
Create or upload one clean character portrait, open OmniArt’s video workspace, and generate a quiet medium shot in V6 before attempting action or multi-shot output. Keep the identity block unchanged as you build the sequence. For camera language, pair this workflow with the cinematic AI video prompt guide.
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