Product video at scale used to mean lighting, turntables, and a week of post. Freepik collapses that into: upload the product, generate the hero frame, drive Kling for image-to-video, export across aspect ratios. Same product, multiple format-ready clips.
Hiring a studio for a single product run rarely pencils out for SKUs in the long tail. A scalable alternative shouldn't look obviously fake — it should look like a real shoot.
Hero frame from a product photo
Nano Banana Pro turns a product reference into a publish-grade hero still. Lighting, background, and angle all controllable by prompt.
360 spin or motion via Kling
Send the locked hero frame into Kling for image-to-video. The product stays on-camera and on-brand throughout the motion.
Multi-aspect export
One render flow, three aspect ratios: 9:16 for TikTok / Reels, 1:1 for feed, 16:9 for landing pages. Aspect controls live on the export step.
Step 1
Upload the product
Drop a clean product photo into the Image Generator. Optionally save it to your brand library as a reusable asset.
Step 2
Generate the hero frame
Use Nano Banana Pro to render a hero still — lighting, background, mood — that matches your brand profile.
Step 3
Animate and export
Drive Kling with the hero frame for image-to-video, then export 9:16 / 1:1 / 16:9 from Canvas in one pass.
The Freepik surfaces this use case routes into.
Image-to-video models like Kling preserve the source frame's geometry. As long as the hero frame is accurate, the motion render keeps the product on-model.
Yes. Canvas supports batch jobs over a list of products, reusing the same brand profile and shot template for each. Pro and Team plans include the larger batch quota.
Yes — fashion is one of the highest-leverage cases. Pair the apparel hero frame with a saved character anchor (model) for consistent on-body look across SKUs.
9:16, 1:1, and 16:9 are the production standards; we render once and crop / re-frame each at the export step rather than re-running the model for each ratio.