LTX Studio’s AI video generator for fast, stylized motion
LTX Studio’s AI video turns text prompts and still images into short video clips, fast. Built for cinematic, motion-rich output rather than photorealism. If your project needs atmospheric animation and quick visual iteration, this is where to start.
What is LTX Studio AI video?
LTX Studio AI video is Lightricks’ video generator. It generates short-form video clips from text prompts and images, prioritizing speed and stylized motion over photorealism.

How LTX Studio AI actually generates video for you
LTX handles the core video generation loop: text-to-video, image-to-video, start/end frame control, scene extension, and audio-driven generation. Understand what each mode does well (and where it needs more from you) to get that usable clip.
Build a scene from a prompt
Describe a scene, and LTX builds it. Angles, subject behavior, and lighting all respond to prompt direction. LTX rewards clear prompts over long ones. Subject, setting, motion, camera, and tone matter most. Miss one, and the model fills the gap. More on structuring prompts in the tips section below.
Animate any still frame
LTX animates uploaded images, adding motion to existing compositions instead of rebuilding the scene from scratch. Works well with concept art, portraits, and photography. The stronger the input, the stronger the output.
Start and end frame control
Make a character’s expression change or a car drive down the road with a start and end frame. LTX generates the transition between them. A fast way to prototype controlled visual sequences. Just make sure the two frames are compatible. Dramatic changes in layout or subject produce drifting.
Extend clips or refine specific moments
Push a clip forward from where it ends, or replace audio, video, or both within a defined section. Both tools are for refining, not rebuilding. Narrow the window and be explicit about what stays the same. The model will drift if given too much room.
Audio-driven generation
Describe a scene with a text prompt, or let an audio input steer the visuals directly. Audio-to-video mode uses the length and pacing of the audio to shape the output. Useful when you're working with a specific soundtrack or voiceover.
What can you create with LTX Studio AI video?
LTX is a strong fit for stylized, short-form work where motion quality matters most. These are the project types it handles best.
One LTX Studio model, clearly defined
In Artlist, LTX Studio runs on a single model. Here’s what it does well, where it’s fast and drifts, and what kind of output it’s actually built for.
LTX Studio Models
How to use LTX Studio AI video in Artlist
LTX Studio AI video works inside Artlist’s AI Toolkit. Here’s how to get from the Toolkit to a finished clip.
The limits you might run into with LTX Studio
How to get better results with LTX Studio
Prompt structure, input quality, camera direction, and guidance scale. These four variables change what comes back more than anything else.
Who is LTX Studio AI video best for?
LTX Studio AI video suits projects where iteration speed and motion quality are key. Here’s who tends to get the most from it, and what that actually looks like in practice.
Frequently asked questions
LTX Studio is available inside Artlist’s AI Toolkit. Select the video generator mode, choose LTX, and add your input (a text prompt, a still image, or both). The model generates a clip at 6, 8, or 10 seconds. From there, you can extend the clip up to 20 seconds, replace or refine specific sections with Retake, or download the finished file directly. The whole loop (generate, review, iterate) runs inside the Toolkit without switching tools.
LTX 2.3 Pro is currently the only LTX model available in Artlist. It’s Lightricks’ current flagship, built for fast, stylized text-to-video and image-to-video generation. As new models from the LTX Studio family are released, this page will be updated.
LTX is built for speed and stylized motion. Where it performs best:
- Fast iteration. Test motion, camera moves, and scene dynamics without long render times
- Cinematic movement and atmospheric effects
- Image-to-video animation that preserves the source composition
- Camera instruction following and prompt adherence. What you specify tends to show up in the output.
Where LTX runs into issues:
- Strict photorealism isn’t what this model is built for.
- On plain or minimal backgrounds, the output can pull toward generic training data, adding unwanted textures or visual noise.
- Over extended clips, character consistency can drift between frames.
- If your prompt is vague, the model fills the gaps on its own terms, which is where outputs start to feel generic.
In practice, LTX AI’s short-form video output covers a wide range of creative work:
- Animated concept art and character portraits
- Pre-vis and pitch reels for film and creative projects
- Product teasers and social content in portrait or landscape
- Atmospheric scene animation, such as landscapes, architecture, environmental stills
- Controlled visual transitions between two defined states
If you want something with a similar feel to LTX (fast generation and stylized output), Hailuo 2.3 Fast Pro and Kling 2.5 Turbo Pro are the closest in the Toolkit. Both prioritize speed and work well for iterative, motion-rich work.
If LTX’s stylized output or 20-second ceiling is the limitation, Veo 3.1 and Sora 2 are worth looking at. Veo 3.1 is the strongest option for photorealistic output. Sora 2 handles higher-fidelity, longer sequences when the brief calls for it.
For overall creative range, Kling 3.0 and Wan 2.7 are two of the most capable all-round models available. Both handle a wider variety of styles and briefs than LTX is designed for.
LTX is developed by Lightricks, an AI company focused on creative tools. Lightricks builds its models in-house. LTX Video is their open-source video model, and LTX Studio is the platform that puts it into production use. Their wider product portfolio includes Facetune, Videoleap, and Photoleap.
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