Animate a character frame
Start with a clean anime character image and add one motion, such as blinking, turning, walking, or wind moving hair.
Open the generatorText and image to video
Turn a prompt or uploaded reference image into a 6–30 second anime video. Paid plans include 1,000 monthly credits; one credit is used per generated second.
First frame
Use an existing image as the visual anchor
Motion brief
Describe one action and camera move
Short clip
Plan loops, reveals, and social-ready shots
APIMart Grok Imagine 1.5 · 6–30 seconds · 480p or 720p
Your generated video appears here
One plan credit is charged per requested video second. Failed APIMart tasks are refunded automatically.
What you can create
Start with a clean anime character image and add one motion, such as blinking, turning, walking, or wind moving hair.
Open the generatorUse a background or keyframe as the first frame, then guide camera movement, lighting changes, and atmosphere.
Open the generatorMake short loops, reveals, intros, and music visual moments from a single strong anime image.
Open the generatorHow it works
The source image anchors character identity, composition, and style, so use the clearest frame you have.
Ask for one action and one camera move. Simple motion usually produces a cleaner short clip than a busy scene.
A planned ending makes the output easier to use as a reel, intro, teaser, or character reveal.
Choose the right workflow
Animating an existing visual
Choose this when the look of the source frame matters.
Creating short clips from a scene idea
Start with a prompt when you do not have a frame yet, then refine the strongest visual direction.
Animating one character consistently
Keep the background simple and describe a single motion when face consistency matters.
It is a workflow that starts from an anime image or character frame, then generates a short animated clip based on the motion and camera direction you describe.
Yes. Use a clear character image, describe one motion, and keep the background simple if identity and face consistency matter.
Image to video is usually better when you already care about the look of a character or frame. Text to video is better for rough scene exploration.