Kling 2.6 swimwear ad prompts can produce native sound when the prompt includes one short line of dialogue plus a few clear ambience cues. This pack mirrors the Seedance swimwear set, but runs the same six scenes on Kling 2.6 with sound ON.
6 swimwear summer ad prompts (with Kling 2.6 outputs)
1) Beach volleyball serve
Prompt: Adult woman (25 years old) in a sporty modest bikini serves a beach volleyball and laughs, sand kicks up, teammates blurred in background, “Set. Spike. Shine.”, ocean waves, volleyball thump, light crowd cheers, seagulls, summer fashion ad, golden hour sunlight, 9:16 vertical commercial framing, smooth gimbal tracking, shallow depth of field, tasteful non-sexual styling.
2) Poolside sunscreen application
Prompt: Adult woman (25 years old) in a modest bikini sits poolside and applies sunscreen to her shoulder, product in hand, camera pushes in, “SPF on. Day on.”, water splash, sunscreen cap click, soft pool ambience, distant kids laughing, clean lifestyle ad, bright midday sun, crisp highlights, 9:16 vertical, slow dolly-in, realistic skin texture, tasteful non-sexual styling.
3) Surfboard walk to the shoreline
Prompt: Adult woman (25 years old) in a modest bikini carries a surfboard down to the shoreline, looks over her shoulder and smiles, “Meet you in the water.”, waves rolling in, board wax squeak, footsteps on wet sand, distant gulls, premium surf ad, golden backlight, lens flare, 9:16 vertical, smooth follow shot, cinematic contrast, tasteful non-sexual styling.
4) Beach lounge + sparkling water
Prompt: Adult woman (25 years old) in a modest bikini reclines on a beach lounge chair, adjusts sunglasses, takes a sip from a cold sparkling water can, “Just one more hour.”, can fizz, ice clink, soft wind, waves in distance, luxury summer ad, warm sun, clean skin highlights, 9:16 vertical, slow tilt up, shallow depth, tasteful non-sexual styling.
5) Beach smoothie bar order
Prompt: Adult woman (25 years old) in a modest bikini stands at a small beach smoothie bar, points to a menu, the bartender hands her a cold drink, “Mango, extra ice.”, blender whirr, ice clatter, beach music far away, waves, bright colorful ad, midday sun, saturated tropical colors, 9:16 vertical, quick rack focus from menu to her smile, tasteful non-sexual styling.
6) Sunset shoreline walk (closing shot)
Prompt: Adult woman (25 years old) in a modest bikini with a light beach cover-up walks along the shoreline at sunset, turns and brushes wet hair back, “This is my season.”, gentle waves, soft wind, distant beach chatter, footsteps in sand, cinematic summer closing shot, warm orange sky, soft film grain, 9:16 vertical, slow steadycam push-in, tasteful non-sexual styling.
Notes for safer, cleaner results
A negative prompt was used to reduce nudity, see-through fabric, and unwanted overlays (no watermark, no subtitles).
If audio sounds crowded, remove one ambience item and keep only 2-3 cues.
If faces drift, simplify the action: slower camera move and fewer background people.
Seedance 1.5 vs Kling 2.6 looks like a simple text-to-video comparison, but native audio changes what “good” means for ads. If the model can land voice, foley, and ambience in the same render as the visuals, the edit step shrinks.
This post runs one skincare-serum campaign concept through both models with audio enabled. It uses five 9:16 prompts. The notes below reference the mid-frame around 2.5s. A full playthrough still matters for motion and audio quality.
Seedance 1.5 vs Kling 2.6: test setup
Use case
Native-audio product ads (UGC + studio)
Mode
Text-to-video
Aspect ratio
9:16
Resolution
480p
Duration
5 seconds per clip
Audio
On
Quick takeaways (based on the mid-frame)
Seedance read more product-forward in the macro hero and the lab shot. The bottle framing and ripple action looked clearer.
Kling looked more “ad-ready” in the unboxing and the skin close-up. The compositions were cleaner and more focused.
Stress test risk showed up in Kling’s montage mid-frame, which went fully abstract at that timestamp.
Prompt-by-prompt results
Prompt 1: Macro product hero (wet slate + ripple)
Prompt: 9:16 cinematic macro product ad. A frosted glass dropper bottle labeled SERUM stands on wet black slate. A droplet falls into a puddle and ripples. Audio: water drip, subtle glass clink, airy synth swell.
Seedance kept a clean, centered bottle with readable “SERUM” in the mid-frame. Kling leaned more stylized, with a vertical label look and a floating-dropper feel.
Seedance 1.5 outputKling 2.6 output
Prompt 2: UGC unboxing (hands + box sounds)
Prompt: 9:16 handheld UGC unboxing at a tidy desk. Two hands open a kraft box and pull out a frosted serum bottle. Audio: cardboard tear, tissue crinkle. Dialogue: “Just one drop and it feels so light.”
Both outputs showed hands and a box. In the mid-frame, Seedance included extra objects that distracted from the reveal. Kling kept a cleaner desk and a clearer product-first moment.
Seedance 1.5 outputKling 2.6 output
Prompt 3: Bathroom application (drop on skin)
Prompt: 9:16 bathroom mirror shot. A person applies one drop of serum, then turns toward camera. Audio: gentle water running, fingertip tap on glass. Dialogue: “No sticky finish. Ready in seconds.”
Seedance framed a mirror scene with multiple products visible. Kling delivered a tight cheek close-up with a clear serum droplet and minimal background, which reads fast in a scroll.
Seedance 1.5 outputKling 2.6 output
Prompt 4: Lab droplet (science texture)
Prompt: 9:16 slow-motion lab shot. A clear droplet falls into a beaker and creates ripples. Match-cut to the serum bottle rotating. Audio: liquid splash, brief whoosh, soft click.
Seedance produced a crisp, centered beaker frame with strong ripple geometry. Kling looked more shallow-focus and cinematic, but the ripple action read weaker in the mid-frame.
Seedance 1.5 outputKling 2.6 output
Prompt 5 (stress test): Fast montage with whip-pan
Prompt: 9:16 fast ad montage. Cap twist, dropper squeeze, product on marble, final hero shot with warm bokeh. One continuous camera move with a whip-pan. Audio: cap twist, marble tap. Dialogue: “Glow now.”
Seedance still showed product and serum texture in the mid-frame. Kling’s mid-frame landed on an abstract bokeh plate with no product visible at that timestamp. That can work as a transition, but it is risky for a 5-second sell.
Seedance 1.5 outputKling 2.6 output
Comparison table: best fit by ad task
Ad task
Seedance 1.5
Kling 2.6
Macro product hero
Clearer mid-frame product read
More stylized mid-frame
UGC unboxing
More clutter mid-frame
Cleaner reveal mid-frame
Serum-on-skin close-up
More context, more distractions
Stronger close-up read
Lab ingredient visual
Stronger ripple action mid-frame
Shallow-focus look
Fast montage stress test
Product stayed visible mid-frame
Mid-frame went abstract
Prompting tips for native-audio ads
Keep dialogue to one short line.
List foley like a checklist: “Audio: drip, clink, whoosh.”
Pick one camera move per clip.
If a montage fails, split it into separate 5-second renders.
Verdict (what to pick first)
For product-first creatives (macro hero, ingredient visuals), Seedance 1.5 looked safer in this concept test because the mid-frames kept the product readable and centered more often.
For UGC-style creatives (hands, faces, tight close-ups), Kling 2.6 looked stronger in this concept test because the mid-frames stayed cleaner and more ad-like, with fewer distractions.
Run these five prompts on seedance2pro.video and compare outputs side by side. Change one variable at a time: duration, camera movement, and audio density. The fastest improvements usually come from simpler prompts.
This post runs the same 5 short ad-style prompts on two text-to-video models: Kling V3 Omni and Alibaba Wan 2.6. Each test uses 9:16, 720p, 5 seconds, audio off, and one simple camera move.
Goal: fast vertical clips that could work as product ads or UGC-style demos
Duration: 5 seconds per run
Ratio: 9:16
Resolution: 720p
Audio: off
Prompt style: 2-4 short sentences, one camera move
5 prompt results (Kling vs Wan)
1) Perfume bottle hero shot (reflections)
Prompt: 9:16 commercial product video. A premium matte-black perfume bottle on dark wet slate. Soft rim light, realistic reflections. Slow camera push-in with a gentle turntable rotation. Clean background, no text.
Kling keeps a matte cylindrical bottle consistent across frames, with stable lighting and reflections.
Wan renders a glossier rectangular glass bottle look with strong highlights. Framing stays steady.
Both clips look ad-usable for a clean product hero shot.
2) UGC hand demo (small object handling)
Prompt: 9:16 UGC phone video in a bright kitchen. A hand opens a wireless earbuds case and takes one earbud out. Slight handheld shake, natural skin texture. Simple background, no text.
Kling stays stable across the open-and-grab sequence, with normal-looking hands in the sampled frames.
Wan looks coherent, but a couple frames show small geometry changes on the earbud/case.
For UGC hands, keeping the action list short helps both models.
3) Running shoes turntable (geometry consistency)
Prompt: 9:16 studio product ad video of a pair of running shoes on a turntable. One smooth orbit around the shoes. Sharp fabric texture, clean highlights, soft shadow. Minimal background, no text.
Kling keeps the shoe form consistent across frames and looks safe for a generic product spin.
Wan looks more stylized and detailed, but the midsole/shape shifts across frames and a brand-like side mark appears.
If the product must stay exact, watch for shape drift and accidental branding on footwear prompts.
4) Stop-motion wrapper reveal (style lock)
Prompt: 9:16 stop-motion paper cutout ad scene. A chocolate bar wrapper flips open and a paper chocolate square pops out. Handcrafted paper texture, simple loop-like motion. Clean composition, no text.
Kling keeps the wrapper and chocolate piece coherent across frames, with a clean minimal look.
Wan shows readable wrapper text (“Chocolate”) even though the prompt asked for no text.
If you need brand safety, add a stronger negative prompt for text/logos and keep packaging generic.
5) Busy neon subway (crowd + signage)
Prompt: 9:16 cinematic handheld shot on a crowded subway platform at night. Neon lights reflect on a wet floor. People walk past the camera. One forward tracking move, realistic motion blur, no readable text.
Kling lands a busy crowd scene, but the sampled frames show more chaos: heavier blur/ghosting and more visible signage.
Wan looks more composed and cinematic across frames, with steadier framing and fewer obviously readable signs.
For public scenes, always watch for readable signage and recognizable faces if the clip goes into a real ad.
Verdict (based on these 5 tests)
If the goal is clean product shots and simple hand demos, Kling V3 Omni looks steadier and more “safe” across frames.
If the goal is a more cinematic vibe for environments (like the subway test), Wan 2.6 looks more composed in this set.
Both can surprise you with accidental text or brand-like marks. Negative prompts help, but reviewing frames before shipping is mandatory.
Prompt tips that improved stability
Write 2-4 short sentences. One subject, one camera move.
Say “no text” and also add a negative prompt for text, watermark, and logos.
For hands: keep the action list to one clear action (open, grab, place). Avoid multi-step instructions.
For product spins: keep the background minimal and avoid brand names.
Try the prompts
Copy the prompts above, keep the settings the same (9:16, 5s, 720p, audio off), and swap only one variable at a time (ratio, duration, or camera move). That makes it easy to see what actually changes.
Kling V3 is a text-to-video model that can generate short vertical clips from one prompt. This post runs 5 real prompts in 9:16 and shows the exact settings and outputs.
Quick specs
Item
Value
Model
Kling V3
Type
Text-to-video
Mode
std
Duration tested
5 seconds
Aspect ratio tested
9:16
Sound
off
CFG scale
0.5
Test setup
Goal: short ad-style clips that work for TikTok and Reels
Prompt: 9:16 commercial product video of a premium skincare serum bottle on dark marble. Soft rim light, realistic glass refraction, tiny water droplets. Slow camera push-in, gentle turntable rotation. Clean background. High-end ad look.
This type of prompt checks if the model keeps reflections stable during a slow move.
2) UGC hand demo (hands + small object actions)
Prompt: 9:16 UGC-style phone video in a bright kitchen. A hand holds a reusable water bottle on a counter. The hand points at the lid and clicks it open. Natural daylight, slight handheld shake, realistic skin texture. Simple background.
UGC prompts expose finger artifacts fast. Keep the action list short and the background plain.
3) Smartwatch orbit (clean product motion)
Prompt: 9:16 photoreal product ad video of a premium smartwatch on dark marble. Soft rim light, clean reflections, subtle fog. Slow camera orbit around the watch, one smooth move. Minimal background, no text.
Product orbits work best when the prompt calls for one move and one subject.
4) Paper cutout stop-motion (style control)
Prompt: 9:16 stop-motion paper cutout scene. A small paper sailboat rocks on layered paper ocean waves under a moon. Handcrafted texture, soft shadows, calm loop-like motion. Clean composition, no text.
This checks style lock. Words like paper cutout, stop-motion, and handcrafted texture help keep the look consistent.
5) Stress test: crowded rainy night market (lots of motion)
Prompt: 9:16 cinematic handheld street shot in a crowded night market in heavy rain. Neon signs reflect on wet pavement. Many people walk past the camera. One smooth forward tracking move. Realistic motion blur, no readable text.