Seedance 2.0 Fashion Prompts: GRWM, Try On, Lookbook
Seedance 2.0 fashion prompts for GRWM, try on hauls, and lookbook clips. Three formats, copyable templates, and remix notes for any brand.

Seedance 2.0 fashion prompts that look like real creator content
Seedance 2.0 fashion prompts are how a clothing brand ships a week of drops in an afternoon. Fashion content has the highest production cost per second of any vertical video format. A single try on haul typically takes a real creator three hours of prep, two hours of shooting, and another two of editing. The cost adds up fast for any brand running weekly drops or restocks. Seedance 2.0 changes the math.
This guide covers the highest use fashion formats on the platform: GRWM (get ready with me), try on hauls, lookbook clips, streetwear lookbooks, and a men's GRWM variant. You get a copyable prompt for each, an annotated breakdown, and notes on how to swap ingredients for your brand. By the end you will know how to ship a week of fashion content in a single sitting.
Fashion is one of the strongest verticals for Seedance 2.0 because the format depends on movement, lighting, and outfit detail, all of which the model handles well. The trick is naming materials, framing, and lighting sources with precision.
Why fashion content needs Seedance 2.0
Seedance 2.0 fashion prompts work best when you name fabric and silhouette explicitly (emerald green silk slip dress, cream cropped knit, high waisted dark denim), lock the lighting source (window light, golden hour, ring light, blue hour, streetlamp), and keep walks to four or five steps. Pair every prompt with a 3 to 5 anchor palette and the universal closing negative cue.
Three problems plague fashion content production. First, casting (you need a creator with the right look for each brand). Second, location (you need a clean apartment, a good mirror, natural light, or a real street). Third, turnaround (the second the drop is live, the content is already late).
Seedance 2.0 solves all three. Casting becomes a sentence in your prompt. Location becomes a phrase. Turnaround drops from days to minutes. The only thing you still need is a reference image of the actual product if you want pixel accurate branding, which is what image to video is for.
The five formats below cover the full funnel: GRWM for top of funnel discovery, try on for mid funnel consideration, lookbook for bottom of funnel conversion, plus a streetwear and a men's variant for full coverage.
Format 1: GRWM (Get Ready With Me)
UGC creator, woman in her late twenties sitting at a vanity mirror in a sunlit bedroom, hair still damp, wearing a cream silk robe. She holds up a tube of foundation, dabs three dots on her cheek and forehead, then blends with a damp sponge in quick circles. She picks up a brown eyeshadow palette, opens it, swipes a brush twice and applies to her eyelid. She looks at herself in the mirror, smiles, says: "Wait, I'm actually obsessed." Filmed with iPhone, soft natural window light from camera left, warm cream and oat palette, handheld. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: the character anchor is specific (woman in her late twenties, cream silk robe, hair still damp). Three details, all visual, all functional. The location is a vanity mirror in a sunlit bedroom, which is the universal GRWM setup.
The action beats run in three logical chunks: foundation (hold tube, dab three dots, blend), eyeshadow (open palette, swipe brush twice, apply), reaction (look in mirror, smile, line). Each chunk is a self contained mini scene that the model can render cleanly.
The dialogue line is short and natural. "Wait I'm actually obsessed" is the closer that breaks the fourth wall. The negative cue keeps stock beauty music out of the final clip.
For any beauty product (foundation, eyeshadow, mascara, brow gel, lipstick), this prompt structure works. Swap the product and the action beats, keep the framing and lighting. Paste this into VIDEO AI ME with your hero product line swapped in.
Format 2: Try on haul
UGC creator, woman in her early twenties standing in front of a full length mirror in a small apartment with natural window light. Shot 1: She holds up a navy blue knit sweater, slips it on over a white tank top, smooths the front, turns to the side and back, says: "This is so soft you have no idea." Shot 2: She pulls on a pair of high waisted denim jeans, buttons them, does a small spin, says: "The fit on these is unreal." Shot 3: She slides into a long camel trench coat, ties the belt, pops the collar, says: "Okay this whole look is mine forever." Filmed with iPhone, soft natural window light from camera right, warm cream and walnut palette, handheld. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: the try on haul format uses multi shot structure with three distinct outfit changes. Each shot block has its own outfit description, action beat (slip on, smooth, turn), and dialogue line. The character anchor and location stay consistent across all three shots, which is what gives the haul continuity.
The materials are named explicitly: navy blue knit, high waisted denim, long camel trench. Seedance 2.0 reads material names well and renders fabric texture better when you give it specifics.
The action beats are short and physical. Slip on, smooth, turn, button, spin, slide on, tie, pop. Each beat is one motion. Stacking too many motions per shot slows the model down.
For a clothing brand, this is the prompt to start with. Swap the three outfits to match your drop, swap the dialogue lines to match your tone, and ship.
Format 3: Lookbook clip
UGC creator, woman in her mid twenties wearing a flowing emerald green silk dress, standing on a quiet cobblestone street in a European old town at golden hour. She walks four steps toward the camera, the dress billows slightly in the wind, she stops, places one hand on her hip, tilts her head, looks past the camera. Then she turns and walks five steps away, glances back over her shoulder, gives a small smile. Filmed with iPhone, warm sunset backlight, slight lens flare on the dress, palette of emerald, terracotta, warm cream, slow handheld. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: lookbook clips do not need dialogue. They need motion, fabric, and atmosphere. The dress is named with a specific color and material (emerald green silk). The location is named with three details (cobblestone street, European old town, golden hour). The wind and the billow give the model a physics cue that makes the silk render more dynamic.
The action beats run in two halves. First half: walk forward, stop, hand on hip, head tilt. Second half: turn, walk away, glance back, smile. Each half is its own mini scene with a clear arc. The palette anchors (emerald, terracotta, warm cream) lock the color story. Without them, the model might shift the dress hue between frames.
For a fashion brand running an editorial campaign, this prompt structure delivers a 6 to 8 second cinematic clip that feels like a real lookbook. Open VIDEO AI ME and run the prompt with your hero piece swapped into the dress description.
Format 4: Streetwear lookbook
UGC creator, young man in his early twenties wearing a black oversized hoodie, baggy cargo pants, and chunky white sneakers, standing in front of a graffiti wall in a downtown alley at blue hour. He puts his hands in his hoodie pocket, leans his shoulder against the wall, looks straight at the camera. He pushes off the wall, walks three steps to the right, stops, turns his head back to the camera, gives a small nod. Filmed with iPhone, cool blue evening light with a single warm streetlamp from camera right, palette of black, teal, mustard yellow from the graffiti, slow handheld. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: the streetwear variant swaps the European old town for a downtown alley with graffiti. Same lookbook structure (lean, push off, walk, turn, nod), different vibe. The lighting recipe is more complex: cool blue base plus a single warm streetlamp accent. This kind of mixed lighting gives streetwear shots their signature mood.
For a streetwear brand, the location detail and the sneaker call out are what sell it. Always name the silhouette of the shoe (chunky white, low top black, high top retro).
Format 5: GRWM for men
UGC creator, man in his early thirties standing in a sunlit bathroom in front of a clean mirror, wearing a white t shirt and gray sweats. He picks up a small bottle of beard oil, drops three dots into his palm, rubs his hands together, then massages the oil into his beard with both hands. He picks up a wooden brush, runs it through his beard twice, then leans toward the mirror, smiles slightly, says: "This stuff makes my beard feel like new." Filmed with iPhone, soft natural window light from above, warm cream and walnut palette, handheld. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works: GRWM is not just for women. The men's variant uses a beard oil routine as the action beat sequence. The structure is identical to the women's GRWM (sit/stand at mirror, hold product, apply, react, line). The character anchor and dialogue tone shift to match the audience.
For men's grooming, this is the prompt to start with. Swap the beard oil for any grooming product (face wash, moisturizer, hair styling, cologne).
Common fashion prompt mistakes
- Vague materials. A dress is not enough. Emerald green silk dress gives the model fabric, color, and silhouette in three words.
- Forgetting the lighting source. Fashion lives or dies on light. Always name window light, golden hour, ring light, blue hour, or streetlamp.
- Too many outfit changes per prompt. Three is the ceiling for try on hauls. More than three and the continuity breaks.
- Long runway walks. Keep walks to four or five steps. Long sequences drift.
- Skipping the palette anchors. Without 3 to 5 named colors, the model picks generic tones. Always anchor.
- Forgetting the negative cue. Fashion prompts often get stock chill music or GRWM captions stamped on by default. Always include the no music no text line.
- Skipping rim light or negative fill. For dramatic editorial looks, name a rim light from behind and negative fill on the camera right side to deepen the contrast.
How to remix this on VIDEO AI ME
Inside VIDEO AI ME, you can save any of these fashion templates and fork them per drop. Pin a reference image of the actual product for pixel accurate branding. Use voice cloning to keep the same creator voice across a whole campaign. Switch to any of 300+ actors for variety, or any of 70+ languages for international markets. Lip sync handles the language switch cleanly. VIDEO AI ME pricing shows what is included on each plan.
Wrap up
Fashion is one of the strongest fits for Seedance 2.0 because the format rewards specific materials, lighting, and motion. GRWM, try on, and lookbook are the three formats to start with. Steal the templates, swap the products, ship the drops. Try Seedance 2.0 free on VIDEO AI ME and produce a week of fashion content before the kettle boils.
More Seedance 2.0 prompts to study
The four reference videos used throughout this guide (a multi shot street interview, a skatepark product UGC, an unboxing narrative with a timelapse, and a high energy gamer reaction) live as a full copyable library on Seedance 2.0 Prompt Templates: Copy Paste and Ship. Bookmark it and remix any of the four when you need a starting point.
Related Seedance 2.0 guides on VIDEO AI ME
If you want to go deeper, these guides pair well with this one:
- Make Explainer Videos With Seedance 2.0 in Under 10 Minutes
- The Seedance 2.0 Prompt Guide: 10 Rules That Always Work
- Seedance 2.0 UGC Prompts: 7 Templates You Can Steal
- Seedance 2.0 Explainer Video Prompts That Convert
You can also browse the full VIDEO AI ME blog for more AI video tutorials, or jump straight into the product and try Seedance 2.0 free on VIDEO AI ME with no credit card.
Frequently Asked Questions
Share
AI Summary

Paul Grisel
Paul Grisel is the founder of VIDEOAI.ME, dedicated to empowering creators and entrepreneurs with innovative AI-powered video solutions.
@grsl_frReady to Create Professional AI Videos?
Join thousands of entrepreneurs and creators who use Video AI ME to produce stunning videos in minutes, not hours.
- Create professional videos in under 5 minutes
- No video skills experience required, No camera needed
- Hyper-realistic actors that look and sound like real people
Get your first video in minutes
Related Articles

Seedance 2.0 Negative Prompts: What to Tell the Model NOT to Do
How to write Seedance 2.0 negative prompts that strip out music, logos, captions, and stock library leaks. Real examples and the universal closing line.

Seedance 2.0 Best Settings: The Configuration That Works
Seedance 2.0 best settings: 720p, 9:16 for short-form social, locked aspect ratio, iPhone aesthetic anchor. Here is the full configuration we use for production work.

Seedance 2.0 Character Consistency: Same Person Across Shots
Seedance 2.0 consistency keeps the same character across multiple shots and clips. Here is how to anchor a face, lock wardrobe, and use reference images for full control.