Real-Person Image to Video in Omni Flash: Consent, Drift, and Motion Limits

May 19, 2026

Real-person image-to-video needs stricter handling than a product shot. A face is not just an input; it carries consent, context, and likeness risk.

Use /image-to-video only when you have the right to use the source image and the intended review or publication context is clear.

Start with permission

Confirm source rights, who appears in the image, where the result may be reviewed, and whether publishing is allowed. Omni Flash can help produce a draft, but it cannot grant usage rights.

Keep movement inside a motion envelope

Start with one human-scale change: gentle push-in, small head turn, natural blink, slight shoulder shift, or subtle hair movement.

Prompt pattern

Use the uploaded portrait as the likeness anchor. Add one subtle movement: [movement]. Preserve face shape, hairstyle, outfit, and main silhouette. Review: does the person remain recognizable and appropriate for the intended context?

Takeaway

For people, Omni Flash is a review tool first. Keep consent explicit, motion restrained, and acceptance criteria visible.

Omni Flash Team

Omni Flash Team

Real-Person Image to Video in Omni Flash: Consent, Drift, and Motion Limits