Tomson Studio is built around a simple idea: a film is more than a prompt. It is a cast, a world, a script, and a sequence of shots that stay consistent. Here is the fastest way to go from an empty project to a finished scene.
1. Create a project
Everything lives inside a project — your characters, locations, props, scripts and episodes. Start by creating one from the sidebar and giving it a name that describes your story.
2. Build your cast and world
Open Personages and add the characters in your story. For each one, write a short description and let the studio generate a reference sheet, or upload an existing image if you already have a look in mind. Repeat the same process for Locations and Attributes (props and recurring objects).
These references are the secret to consistency: every scene that includes a character reuses its sheet, so faces and designs do not drift between shots.
3. Write your script
Head to Scripts and describe your premise. Choose a language model, and the studio drafts a structured screenplay you can edit freely. Use it as your blueprint for the scenes to come.
4. Storyboard your scenes
Inside an Episode, create a screen for each shot. Write a prompt, select which characters, locations and props appear, optionally add reference images, and pick the aspect ratio. The references you select are fed into generation to keep the world coherent.
5. Generate, continue, and export
- Generate each scene with the video model that suits the shot.
- Continue from the previous clip's last frame for seamless cuts.
- Stitch selected scenes together and download the final clip — right in your browser.
That is the whole loop. Start small with a single scene, get a feel for how references shape the output, then scale up to a full episode.