AI Video Prompts for Wedding & Celebration
First looks, ceremony vows, slow-motion bouquet tosses, golden-hour portraits, and the euphoria of a dance floor at full energy — these Seedance 2.0 wedding prompts capture the most important day in the cinematic language it deserves.
Wedding videography is about the unrepeatable moment — and the camera has one job: earn the trust to be invisible so the moment can happen, then make it last forever. The prompts that fail describe the occasion ("wedding ceremony") rather than the beat ("the groom's breath catching as the doors open and he sees her for the first time"). Wedding video lives in those half-second physiological tells — the exhale, the jaw that tenses then releases, the hands that reach without deciding to. These Seedance 2.0 wedding prompts encode the specific beat: the camera position that earns the moment, the light source that flatters without announcing itself, and the subject behavior that makes an audience feel like they were there rather than watching footage. The ceremonies here span every scale and season: intimate outdoor first looks lit by early morning overcast, cathedral aisles where a single shaft of stained-glass light lands on two hands clasping, and sun-set portraits where the photographer has positioned the couple inside a backlit frame that separates them from the world. Reception coverage runs from the quiet moment before the speeches to the full-energy dance floor where timing the confetti burst becomes a clip people share for years. Across all of it, the technique is the same: name the camera position, the light quality and source, the subject relationship, and the single behavioral tell that makes the moment human. A long-lens compress of two people half a field apart who find each other — that is a wedding frame. A wide-angle reception shot of 200 people is not. Copy a prompt, swap in your couple's details and the location's specific light, and keep the behavioral and camera direction intact — those two layers are the whole discipline of wedding cinematography, whether you are directing an AI or a camera operator.
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Frequently asked questions
What are the best AI video prompts for wedding videos?
The best wedding prompts name the exact emotional beat rather than the occasion. "A wedding ceremony" is an event; "slow push-in as the officiant asks them to face each other, the groom's expression shifting from nerves to absolute certainty, soft north window light, camera at eye level" is a wedding cinematography direction. Every prompt needs three layers: the camera position and move, the light quality and source, and the specific behavioral beat — the micro-expression, the hand gesture, the breath — that makes the moment feel lived rather than staged. All the prompts in this gallery use that three-layer structure.
How do I write a wedding first look prompt for Seedance 2.0?
Structure the first look as a sequence: (1) the setup — what each person is doing as they approach the moment, camera wide enough to show both; (2) the turn — the camera holds as one person taps the other's shoulder or calls their name, the other begins to turn; (3) the reaction — push into a medium close-up on the face that sees first, then cut or pan to the second face. Light from behind (golden hour backlight or a large window behind them) separates the subjects from the background and keeps the faces softly lit. Name both the camera move at each beat and the behavioral cue — "she exhales slowly before turning; his jaw is set then releases when he sees her" — so Seedance can execute the performance, not just the framing.
Can Seedance 2.0 generate wedding reception and celebration video?
Yes. Seedance 2.0 handles celebration and reception scenarios well when the prompt names the specific action and energy level. For a first dance, give the camera a move that matches the music tempo — "a slow orbit around the couple, pulling back to reveal the empty dance floor around them" works well for intimate dances; a faster tracking shot at waist level works for high-energy dancing. For reception crowd shots, name the confetti or sparkler timing and the crowd behavior explicitly: "confetti rains from above as the couple exits through a tunnel of cheering guests, wide tracking shot, warm reception hall light with camera at guest eye-level." For toasts and speeches, specify the two-shot — speaker at the microphone, couple in soft focus reacting — and name the reaction beat you want to land on. Browse the wedding prompts here for examples with preview videos.