
Learn how Kling Motion Control works - upload a reference video and static image to create videos with transferred motion. Complete guide with examples and tips.
I've tested a lot of AI video tools, and most of them work the same way: you upload an image, write a prompt, and hope the AI generates the movement you want. Sometimes it works, sometimes you get something completely random.
Kling Motion Control takes a different approach. Instead of describing the motion you want in words, you show the AI exactly what motion you want by uploading a reference video.
Here's how it works:
Think of it like motion transfer or motion cloning. You're not manually controlling camera angles or writing complex prompts—you're showing the AI an example of the motion you want, and it copies that motion onto your image.
The traditional approach to AI video generation has a problem: unpredictability. You write "camera zooms in slowly" and maybe it zooms, maybe it pans, maybe it barely moves. You write "character dances" and you get some generic movement that might not match what you had in mind.
Motion control via reference video solves this by letting you be specific without needing perfect prompt engineering skills. Instead of trying to describe complex motion in words, you just show an example.
Real-world example:
The reference video acts as a blueprint. The AI extracts the motion patterns, timing, and dynamics from your reference video and applies them to your image while preserving the visual style and content of your image.
Using Domer's Kling Motion Control tool is straightforward once you understand what you need. Here's the complete workflow:
This is the image you want to animate. It could be a portrait, a character illustration, a product photo, or any static image.
Requirements:
What works best:
You can use photos you've taken, AI-generated images from Domer's text-to-image tool, or any image you have rights to use.
This is the most important part. Your reference video contains the motion you want to transfer to your image.
Requirements:
Where to find reference videos:
What makes a good reference video:
Go to Domer's Kling Motion Control tool and upload:
The interface is simple - you'll see upload areas for both the image and video.
You can add a text description to guide the generation, but it's optional. The motion comes from your reference video, not the prompt.
When to use a prompt:
Example prompts:
Click the generate button and wait. Processing typically takes 2-3 minutes.
What you get:
If the result isn't what you expected:
The key to good results is choosing the right reference video. The motion transfer works best when the reference video clearly shows the motion you want.
Let me walk through some real use cases to show you what's possible with motion transfer.
What you need:
How it works: The AI takes the dance movements from your reference video and applies them to your portrait. Your portrait character will move and dance with the same motions as the person in the reference video.
Best for: Social media content, creative projects, character animation
What you need:
How it works: The camera movement from your reference video gets applied to your product image, creating a dynamic product video without needing to film the actual product.
Best for: E-commerce, product marketing, social media ads
What you need:
How it works: The facial expressions, head movements, and gestures from your reference video get transferred to your character illustration, bringing it to life.
Best for: Animation projects, storytelling, character development
What you need:
How it works: The camera motion from your reference video creates a dynamic video from your static landscape, adding cinematic movement without needing to reshoot.
Best for: Travel content, real estate, portfolio work
After testing motion transfer with dozens of different images and reference videos, here's what I've learned about getting consistently good results.
The quality of your reference video directly impacts your results. Look for videos where:
Avoid reference videos with rapid cuts, shaky camera work, or unclear motion patterns.
If your static image is a close-up portrait, use a reference video with similar framing (close-up of a person). If your image is a wide landscape, use a reference video with wide framing.
Mismatched framing can lead to unexpected results where the motion doesn't transfer cleanly.
For your first attempts, use reference videos with simple, clear motion:
Once you understand how the motion transfer works, you can experiment with more complex reference videos.
The output video duration matches your reference video duration. If you want a 5-second result, use a 5-second reference video.
Shorter videos (3-10 seconds) tend to work better than longer ones because the motion is more focused and easier for the AI to transfer cleanly.
Both your static image and reference video should be high quality:
Better source materials lead to better results.
Kling Motion Control's approach to video generation is different from traditional text-to-video tools. Instead of describing motion in words and hoping the AI understands, you show the AI exactly what motion you want by providing a reference video.
This makes the process more predictable and gives you precise control over the final result. The learning curve is minimal - once you understand that you need a static image + reference video, you can start creating.
Ready to create your first motion-controlled video? Here's how to get started:
What makes Kling Motion Control different:
What you need:
Best practices:
Ready to try motion transfer? Start with Kling Motion Control
Explore more AI video tools:
Need images first? Text to Image Generator
Check pricing: View Plans
Last Updated: January 13, 2026

Complete guide to creating Baby Brat memes—the cursed-cute trend combining baby filters with brat aesthetics. Get the best AI prompts, tools, and tips for viral-worthy images.

Everything you need to know about Domer AI—a fast, free image generator for creating memes, art, and transformations. Get 10 free credits to start.

A deep dive into the Domer meme that took over TikTok in late 2025. Learn what 'Domer' means, why it went viral, and how to create your own Domer-style images with AI.