| name | video-poster-design |
| description | Create cinematic movie poster concepts and final poster images from a user's brief, existing video plan, storyboard, character design, or project context. Use this skill whenever the user asks to generate a film poster, movie poster, key art, campaign poster, teaser poster, title poster, or promotional visual for a video project. This skill proposes several creative directions first when appropriate, defaults to a 3:4 poster ratio when no ratio is specified, and ensures typography, title treatment, imagery, genre, setting, and story tone are coherent and visually inventive. |
Video Poster Design
Use this skill to create movie-poster-style key art for a video, short film, vlog, TVC, storyboard, or campaign.
The final output is a poster image. When useful, also create a short poster spec or prompt file so the design can be regenerated consistently.
Default Behavior
If the user does not specify an aspect ratio, use 3:4.
If the user asks for a poster but has not chosen a creative direction, propose 3-5 poster concepts first and ask them to choose one. Keep the options concise and visually distinct.
If the user already gives a clear direction, title, ratio, and story context, proceed directly to image generation.
Output Location
Use a project-local poster directory:
posters/
Recommended file names:
posters/{poster-name}.png
posters/{poster-name}.md
Use lowercase, hyphenated, ASCII-safe names. Examples:
posters/youth-unlimited.png
posters/meaning-of-travel-teaser.png
posters/campus-energy-key-art.md
Do not overwrite existing files unless the user explicitly requests replacement. For variants, use suffixes such as -v2, -teaser, -main, -alt-a.
Inputs to Extract
Before designing, identify:
- Poster title and subtitle.
- Video/story context.
- Genre: drama, travel, romance, documentary, commercial, thriller, coming-of-age, sports, etc.
- Required aspect ratio. Default:
3:4.
- Main character(s), product, place, or object.
- Character design images or approved reference assets.
- Storyboard or scene images that define visual continuity.
- Mood and emotional promise.
- Setting, time period, weather, and culture.
- Typography language: English, Chinese, bilingual, no text, etc.
- Required copy: tagline, credits, release date, brand line, campaign line.
- Output path if specified.
If the user does not specify text language, use the user's local language for any prompt/spec, and use poster typography that matches the title/campaign language.
Use Available Visual References
If the context contains any of these assets, use them as references for poster generation when relevant:
characters/*.png character design sheets.
- Approved character
.md specs.
storyboard/scene-XX.png images.
- Existing poster drafts.
- Product or brand assets provided by the user.
When a character design image exists, feed it to the image generation model as a visual reference so the poster preserves character identity, hairstyle, wardrobe, body proportions, and material details.
When a storyboard image exists, use it to preserve scene language, color palette, setting, and story mood.
Creative Direction Options
When proposing options, make them concrete. Each option should include:
- Concept name.
- Main image composition.
- Typography direction.
- Color and lighting.
- Story emotion.
- Why it fits.
Example option format:
## Poster Concepts
1. **Blue Hour Arrival**
- Composition: [specific image]
- Typography: [title style]
- Color: [palette]
- Emotion: [promise]
- Fit: [why this works]
2. **Object as Portal**
- Composition: [specific image]
- Typography: [title style]
- Color: [palette]
- Emotion: [promise]
- Fit: [why this works]
Do not make all options variations of the same composition. Vary the visual strategy:
- Character-led portrait.
- Environmental wide poster.
- Object-led symbolic poster.
- Motion/action poster.
- Minimal teaser.
- Ensemble composition.
- Graphic split or reflection concept.
- Product-as-hero commercial poster.
Typography Principles
Poster typography must match the story, setting, genre, and background image. It should not feel like generic overlay text.
Choose type direction based on context:
- Coming-of-age / campus: energetic but clean, slightly condensed sans serif, hand-painted or marker accent only if it feels natural.
- Travel documentary: editorial serif or restrained humanist sans, generous spacing, quiet placement.
- Romance: soft serif, handwritten accent, or understated title lockup depending on tone.
- Sports / youth TVC: bold condensed sans, dynamic italic or kinetic stacked layout.
- Thriller: severe condensed type, high contrast, restrained title placement.
- Sci-fi: technical geometry, but avoid generic neon unless the setting supports it.
- Period film: typography should reference the era without becoming costume-like.
- Minimal arthouse: sparse type, strong negative space, carefully placed title.
Integrate typography with the image:
- Let title placement interact with light, architecture, silhouette, product shape, or motion direction.
- Keep text legible.
- Avoid random fonts, fake credits, distorted letterforms, and unreadable generated text.
- If exact typography matters, consider generating poster art with clean space for text, then add text using deterministic design tools or image editing.
Poster Spec Template
When saving a .md spec, use:
# [Poster Title]
## Source Context
- Project:
- Poster type:
- Aspect ratio:
- Reference assets:
- Language:
## Selected Concept
- Concept name:
- Core image:
- Story emotion:
- Genre signal:
## Composition
- Foreground:
- Midground:
- Background:
- Character / product placement:
- Negative space:
- Motion direction:
## Typography
- Title:
- Subtitle / tagline:
- Typeface direction:
- Placement:
- Color:
- Integration with image:
## Color & Lighting
- Palette:
- Contrast:
- Time of day:
- Texture / grain:
## Image Generation Prompt
[Complete final prompt.]
## Negative Prompt
- No generic poster template
- No random extra text
- No unreadable typography
- No distorted letters
- No extra logos
- No inconsistent character
- No unwanted face changes
- No AI-smooth skin
- No deformed hands
- No irrelevant props
Image Generation Prompt Structure
Use this structure for the final poster image:
Create a cinematic movie poster, aspect ratio [ratio], for [title/project].
Use the provided reference images if available:
- Match character identity, hairstyle, wardrobe, and material details from the character design sheet.
- Preserve scene mood, color palette, and setting from the storyboard references.
Concept: [selected concept name].
Story: [one-sentence story premise or emotional promise].
Composition: [foreground, midground, background, negative space, camera angle].
Main subject: [character/product/place/object details].
Typography: [title text, language, placement, font direction, texture, integration with image].
Color and lighting: [palette, contrast, time of day, grain, atmosphere].
Style: [commercial key art / arthouse poster / documentary poster / teaser poster / campaign poster].
Make the typography feel designed for this story and setting, not generic. Letterforms should be legible, intentional, and integrated with the background image.
Negative constraints: no random extra text, no fake credits unless requested, no unreadable letters, no distorted title, no extra logos, no inconsistent character, no wrong wardrobe, no AI-looking skin, no deformed hands, no cluttered layout.
Workflow
- Read relevant project context: plan, storyboard, character design, prior poster references, or user brief.
- Extract title, ratio, story, genre, main subject, visual references, and required text.
- If ratio is missing, set it to
3:4.
- If the creative direction is not already clear, propose
3-5 concepts and ask the user to choose.
- After the user chooses, write a compact poster spec if helpful.
- Generate the poster image using the selected concept and all relevant references.
- Save the image to
posters/{poster-name}.png.
- Inspect the result if possible: ratio, composition, typography, character consistency, artifacts.
- If text rendering is poor and exact text matters, recommend or perform a second pass with deterministic text overlay when appropriate.
- Final response should include the saved path and render the image when supported.
Quality Checklist
Before finalizing, verify:
- Aspect ratio matches the requested ratio or defaults to
3:4.
- Poster concept fits the story, genre, background, and setting.
- Typography direction matches the narrative world.
- Title is legible enough for the intended use.
- There is no random or unintended text.
- Character identity is consistent when references are provided.
- Wardrobe and material details are consistent when character references are provided.
- Composition has a clear visual hierarchy.
- Poster does not look like a generic template.
- Output file is saved under
posters/ unless the user requested otherwise.
Example
User asks:
Make a poster for the 60-second campus sports drink TVC. Youth unlimited, campus style.
If no direction is specified, propose:
- Run Toward the Light — full-body student running into morning track light, kinetic bold sans title.
- Blue Bottle Spark — product close-up with campus reflected in condensation, clean commercial typography.
- School Gate Launch — wide campus gate with students moving through sunlit trees, title integrated with shadows.
- After-Sweat Smile — character portrait with realistic sweat and blue-white palette, youth campaign title lockup.
Default ratio: 3:4.