Traditional video cuts can feel abrupt. Freepik's transition engine allows you to instruct Sora 2 or Kling to bridge two different scenes with custom camera moves — zoom, pan, whip pan, or morph — maintaining flow and rhythm.
Standard video models treat every generation as an isolated scene. Stitching them together leads to visual shocks at the cuts. Creating a natural visual transition shouldn't require complex 3D tracking or manual masking.
Camera motion bridging
Define camera moves at the tail of shot A and the head of shot B. Freepik aligns the motion vectors (e.g. tracking right to pan right) for a fluid cut.
AI morphing & interpolation
Transitioning between abstract graphics or products? Freepik uses Kling's frame interpolation to morph the geometry of shot A into shot B smoothly.
Cross-dissolve matching
Manage exposure and color palettes across cuts automatically, eliminating lighting jumps when transition frames are generated.
Step 1
Place scenes on Canvas
Select two sequential clips on the Canvas timeline that you want to connect.
Step 2
Select transition style
Pick a motion preset (whip pan, zoom in, slide, dissolve) or write a custom instruction like 'camera passes through a keyhole'.
Step 3
Render the transition clip
Freepik generates the intermediate frames using Kling or Sora 2 and blends them seamlessly into your timeline.
The Freepik surfaces this use case routes into.
Freepik utilizes Kling and Sora 2 for rendering transitions because of their superior spatial-temporal modeling and motion coherence.
Yes. You can configure transitions to be anywhere from 0.5 seconds up to 3.0 seconds, depending on the pacing of your video.
Yes. Freepik can generate a motion transition from a static image to a video, or between two static images.
Transitions are processed through the cloud render queue (Kling or Sora 2), taking roughly 15-45 seconds to compile.