Cooking milk tea

text-to-video

1 clip
1 uses

Any aspect ratio

Prompt

Cinematic close-up sequence of masala chai being prepared. Fresh spices—cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, ginger—are gently crushed and added to boiling water, releasing aromatic steam. Tea leaves swirl as milk is poured in, turning the brew a rich golden-brown. The chai is stirred slowly with a wooden spoon, tiny bubbles forming on the surface, and poured into traditional cups, creating delicate streams. Warm, soft lighting highlights the textures of spices, frothy milk, and swirling tea. Ambient kitchen sounds—boiling water, gentle clinks of utensils, subtle hissing—enhance realism. Shot with medium macro to wide coverage, cinematic color grading emphasizing golden tones, cozy and inviting atmosphere, perfect for an emotional, sensory-rich food video.

Transform Text into Studio-Quality Video with This Magic Hour Template

Turn a short text prompt into a polished, AI-generated video in minutes—no editing skills required. This template is built on Magic Hour’s Text-to-Video engine and is fully remixable, so you can adapt it for product explainers, social content, ads, tutorials, and more.


What This Template Is Best For

This Text-to-Video template is designed for:

  • Founders & marketers
    • Launch videos, product walkthroughs, landing-page hero videos, ad creatives
  • Creators & social teams
    • TikTok/Reels/Shorts concepts, narrative skits, explainers, channel intros
  • Educators & course builders
    • Lesson intros, microlearning clips, concept explainers
  • Developers & startups
    • Feature demos, onboarding flows, investor updates, internal training clips

You bring the script (or just an idea). Magic Hour turns it into a coherent video with motion, scenes, and visuals that match your prompt.


How to Remix This Template in Magic Hour

You can create your own version of this template entirely inside Magic Hour by:

  1. Starting from any Text Prompt

    • Open Magic Hour’s Text-to-Video.
    • Describe what you want: subject, setting, style, pacing, and camera movement.
    • Example:
      • “30-second product demo video of a SaaS dashboard in a minimalist, high-contrast style, smooth camera pans, clean white background, subtle UI animations.”
  2. Remixing This Structure

    • Use a simple structure you can reuse:
      • Hook (1–3 seconds)
      • Problem or context (5–7 seconds)
      • Solution or product moment (10–15 seconds)
      • Proof or benefit (5–10 seconds)
      • Call to action (3–5 seconds)
    • Write these as text descriptions that reference the scene content, not video jargon. Magic Hour will interpret them visually.
  3. Iterating with Prompt-Only Changes

    • Generate a first version, then refine your prompts:
      • Clarify style: “cinematic lighting,” “flat 2D animation,” “hand-drawn look”
      • Clarify subject: “close-up of hands using a phone,” “overhead shot of a workspace”
      • Clarify mood: “calm and professional,” “playful and colorful,” “dark and dramatic”
    • Think of each revision as “v2 of the same idea.” Keep what works, tighten what doesn’t.
  4. Branching Into Variations

    • For A/B tests or channel-specific cuts:
      • Shorten/lengthen runtime via wording (“quick 10-second teaser,” “detailed 45-second walkthrough”)
      • Localize by updating language and cultural references
      • Change aspect hints (e.g., social vertical vs. web hero style) via your prompt description

Recommended Workflows and Stack Combinations

To build more advanced workflows around this Text-to-Video template, you can chain it with other Magic Hour tools:


Example Prompt Patterns You Can Reuse

You can copy and adapt these prompt formulas directly inside Magic Hour:

  1. Product Explainer (B2B SaaS)

    • “30-second product explainer video for a B2B SaaS dashboard. Clean, minimal, bright office environment. Start with a frustrated knowledge worker juggling spreadsheets, then smoothly transition into a calm, organized dashboard UI. Cinematic but simple camera moves, close-ups on keyboard and screen, subtle motion graphics highlighting key features: automation, analytics, team collaboration. Professional, trustworthy, modern tech brand aesthetic.”
  2. Social Media Teaser

    • “15-second vertical teaser video for a mobile app launch. Fast-paced cuts, bold typography, high-contrast colors. Show hands using the app on a smartphone in different locations: café, subway, home sofa. Quick, energetic transitions, punchy text overlays like ‘Stop context switching’ and ‘One app for everything.’ Youthful, urban, TikTok/Reels-friendly style.”
  3. Educational Explainer

    • “60-second educational explainer video about how large language models work, in a simplified, visual style. Use abstract shapes, flowing lines, and animated diagrams to show input text, tokenization, attention, and output. Calm, clear pacing with visual metaphors (conveyor belts, networks of lights). Neutral color palette, modern flat design, no characters, focus on clarity.”
  4. Character / Story-Driven Clip

    • “45-second narrative video featuring a single main character: a developer working late in a minimalist home office. Show progression from overwhelmed with multiple windows and notes to calm and focused after using an AI productivity tool. Soft, cinematic lighting, warm tones, shallow depth of field, subtle camera movements. Emphasis on facial expressions and mood shifts.”

Use these as starting points and tailor domain language, tone, and length for your own product or story.


When to Use Text-to-Video vs. Other Magic Hour Tools

  • Use Text-to-Video (this template) when:

    • You want to go from idea → finished video with no assets
    • You need many variations quickly (different hooks, angles, or brand messages)
    • You’re exploring visual directions before investing in custom design
  • Use Video-to-Video (Video-to-Video) when:

    • You already have footage and want to stylize or transform it
    • You need to maintain specific timing or choreography
  • Use Face Swap Video (Face Swap Video) or Face Swap GIF (Face Swap GIF) when:

    • Your core asset is a person or character, and you’re personalizing it for different audiences
  • Use Animation Template (Animation) when:

    • You want a more explicitly animated or stylized look from the start

Best Practices for High-Quality Outputs

To consistently get strong results from this template:

  • Write prompts like a director, not a keyword list

    • Include: subject, setting, mood, style, and rough duration.
    • Specify camera vantage point when it matters: “over-the-shoulder,” “close-up,” “wide establishing shot.”
  • Align with your brand system

    • Describe color palette (“muted pastels,” “bold primary colors”), typography feel (“techy and geometric,” “friendly and rounded”), and overall tone (“serious and analytical,” “playful and human”).
  • Think in scenes

    • Even if you’re using a single prompt, think of it as a mini storyboard: how does the visual situation change from beginning to end?
  • Plan for distribution

    • Decide early whether you’re aiming for website hero, paid ads, or social verticals, and describe that context in your prompts.
  • Pair with voice, captions, and accessibility


Ideas for Advanced Users and Teams

For teams building systematic content pipelines:

  • Programmatic creative testing

    • Define a standard prompt framework (hook/problem/solution/proof/CTA) and vary only one element (problem framing, visual style, or CTA text) across many runs to test performance.
  • Localized campaigns

    • Keep structure identical but update cultural context, locations, and language in your prompts to generate market-specific variants.
  • Content series

    • Use a shared “visual bible”: describe the same color scheme, character archetypes, and environments across all prompts to create a recognizable series.
  • Cross-format consistency


Use this template as a starting point, then treat each prompt revision as an experiment. Over a few iterations, most teams converge on a repeatable “house style” that makes future video generation faster, cheaper, and more consistent—while staying entirely within Magic Hour.

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