Reference-led video
Start from a still image when the subject, outfit, product, or scene layout needs to remain recognizable as motion is added.
A VideoAny video workflow for turning source images and motion prompts into expressive short clips, with fewer unnecessary blocks for legitimate creator-led projects.
I2V
Primary workflow
Audio-aware
Prompt direction
Motion-first
Creative use case
Start from a still image when the subject, outfit, product, or scene layout needs to remain recognizable as motion is added.
Write motion and sound direction in the same brief so the clip can be planned around atmosphere, pacing, and sonic context.
Use it for cinematic pushes, reactions, gestures, lighting shifts, and social-ready moments where the still image needs a clear animated beat.
Run the same source through a few motion prompts, compare the timing and subject stability, then keep the strongest take.
VideoAny frames uncensored as fewer false refusals for legitimate non-explicit work, not permission to violate consent, law, or platform rules.
Move from still generation to image-to-video and then into other VideoAny tools without rebuilding your creative pipeline.
A source-image-first video model page adapted for VideoAny workflows.
WAN 2.7 Spicy is presented here as a VideoAny workflow for creators who want to animate a source image with a motion prompt and a clear production brief. It fits image-to-video tasks where preserving the subject and composition matters more than starting from a blank text-only idea.
The source reference page positions WAN 2.7 as part of Alibaba Tongyi Lab's Wan video family and emphasizes image-to-video, motion direction, audio-aware prompting, and short-form publishing use cases. In this VideoAny implementation, the page keeps that information architecture while using VideoAny routes, copy, and safety language.
Use this page as a model-selection guide. Start with a still image, describe the camera move, subject action, mood, and audio context, then generate a small set of candidate clips. The strongest results usually come from changing one motion variable at a time instead of rewriting the entire prompt.
Uncensored does not mean unrestricted misuse. VideoAny still requires lawful use, consent for real people and likenesses, respect for rights, and compliance with safety rules.
Three source-page video examples are mirrored through VideoAny's CDN so the page uses public R2 URLs instead of external page assets.
Choose the model by the production problem you need to solve, not only by model name.
| Model | Best at | Pick when |
|---|---|---|
| WAN 2.7 Spicy | Reference-led image-to-video with expressive motion direction | You have a source image and want a motion-first clip with a clear cinematic or social beat |
| WAN 2.7 | General Wan-family video generation | You want a broader VideoAny Wan page before choosing a more specialized workflow |
| WAN 2.6 | Established Wan-family image-to-video production | You prefer a familiar baseline model and want to compare quality against newer outputs |
| Seedance 2.0 | Dynamic video generation and camera-forward results | Camera movement and broad creative range matter more than matching the Wan-family look |
| Kling 3.0 | High-quality video generation across varied prompt styles | You want a strong all-round video model to benchmark against Wan outputs |
Use another VideoAny entry point when these constraints matter more:
Keep the loop short so each generation tells you what to adjust next.
Use a clear subject, readable pose, and composition that can survive motion without becoming visually confusing.
Specify camera movement, subject action, pacing, mood, and any sound or atmosphere you want the clip to imply.
Create a few variations from the same source image and compare stability, timing, expression, and scene coherence.
Adjust only the weakest point—camera speed, gesture, lighting, or audio context—then regenerate for a cleaner comparison.
Five tactics for motion prompts that are easier to evaluate and iterate.
Use concrete phrases such as slow push-in, handheld drift, orbit, close-up reveal, or gentle pullback before adding mood words.
Name the visible action you want: eyes look up, fabric moves in wind, product rotates, character turns, or lights flicker.
Tell the model whether the motion should feel subtle, dramatic, quick, smooth, intimate, energetic, or restrained.
If audio context matters, describe it as a separate phrase after the movement so visual and sonic direction do not blur together.
Highly ambiguous poses, cluttered backgrounds, or tiny faces leave less signal for stable animation.
Avoid stacking multiple camera moves, changing the identity described in the image, asking for impossible physics, or using uncensored wording to request unsafe or non-consensual content.
WAN 2.7 Spicy is a good VideoAny page for creators who want a reference-led video workflow: upload a still image, define a motion and audio-aware brief, generate multiple clips, and compare the results against a clear creative target.
Use it when the image anchor matters. Switch to Text-to-Video for blank-slate scenes, compare with other VideoAny video models for style differences, and keep responsible-use constraints in scope on every generation.
Use these VideoAny entry points for Wan-style video workflows:
Upload a source image, describe the movement and atmosphere, then generate a short animated clip.
Open Image-to-VideoStart from a written scene brief when you do not need a source image to anchor the subject or composition.
Try Text-to-VideoPractical answers before using this model page.
It is best framed as a reference-led image-to-video workflow: start from a still image, define a motion brief, and generate short clips with a clear animated beat.
No. The structure and media are referenced from the source page, but the copy is rewritten for VideoAny and avoids unsupported claims about private deployment settings, fixed pricing, or guaranteed output limits.
Use Image-to-Video when identity, product shape, outfit, pose, or composition should follow a source image.
Use Text-to-Video when the scene can be generated from a prompt without a visual anchor.
Keep the same source image, adjust one motion variable per run, and compare clips on stability, timing, expression, and scene coherence.
On VideoAny it means fewer unnecessary blocks for legitimate non-explicit creative work.
It does not remove rules around consent, minors, illegal content, real-person likenesses, intellectual property, or platform safety.
The visible examples are hosted from VideoAny's R2 CDN for this implementation. Treat them as page examples, not as reusable source material for your own commercial projects unless you have the required rights.
Uncensored workflows still require clear boundaries. Only create and publish content you are allowed to make.
Open Image-to-Video, bring a source image you have rights to use, and test a focused motion prompt.
Open Image-to-Video