For pre-production and concept exploration

From brief to moodboard, in an afternoon

50 concept frames across 5 visual directions. Built for the meeting where the director needs to see the options, not the description of them.

Open workflow

When to use this recipe

Pre-production exploration; campaign kickoff; pitching a creative direction.

50concept frames across 5 visual directions
3 hoursFrom brief to director-review-ready in about
3 to 5When directions are credible and the team needs to compare, this is the recipe

Brief is written and approved

A concept frame moodboard interprets the brief into visuals. The brief itself needs to be locked. Generating concepts against a moving brief wastes the session.

Multiple directions to explore

When 1 direction is obvious, you do not need this workflow. When 3 to 5 directions are credible and the team needs to compare, this is the recipe.

Director or client review imminent

Built to ship a deck before the review meeting. The moodboard is the artifact the conversation happens around.

You have about 3 hours of focused time

Concept generation rewards iteration. 50 frames cannot be batched in 30 minutes and reviewed thoughtfully. Block the time.

The workflow

Six steps from brief to director-review-ready moodboard.

1
Translate the brief into 5 visual directions (30 minutes)
Read the brief. Write 5 distinct creative directions that the brief could go. Each direction is a short paragraph plus 3 reference images pulled from existing cinema or photography.
2
Build the prompt anchor per direction (15 minutes)
For each direction, write the prompt language that captures it. Reference the visual cues, lens grammar, color palette. The anchor prompts are reused across all 10 frames per direction.
3
Generate 10 frames per direction (45 minutes)
Run the moodboard workflow with each direction's anchor prompt. Generate 10 variations per direction. Image generation is fast (about 8 to 15 seconds each).
4
Curate to 6 to 8 frames per direction (30 minutes)
Reject obvious quality failures and frames that drift off the direction. Keep the 6 to 8 strongest per direction. The cut down is more important than the generation.
5
Assemble the moodboard layout (30 minutes)
One page per direction, with the strongest frame as hero plus 5 supporting frames. Include the direction paragraph and reference anchors. Ship as a single PDF.
6
Annotate for the review meeting (15 minutes)
Per direction: pros, cons, production implications. Reviewers do not read paragraphs; they scan annotations. Three bullet points per direction is enough.

Tips and failure modes

Six patterns separating useful moodboards from generation dumps.

Reference anchor images change everything

Pulling 3 reference images per direction (from films or photography) compresses iteration. The prompt language anchors to specific visuals rather than abstract description.

5 directions is the sweet spot

Below 3, you are not exploring. Above 7, decision fatigue dominates. 5 distinct credible directions give the best review-meeting decision quality.

Cut down ruthlessly

10 generated minus 2 to 4 quality failures equals 6 to 8 strongest per direction. Do not present everything generated; present the curated set.

One page per direction in the layout

Mixing directions on one page confuses the review. Hero plus supporting frames per direction, separate page each. The visual hierarchy reads cleanly.

Annotate production implications

Per direction: estimated production cost, time to shoot/generate, model requirements, casting needs. Reviewers care about feasibility as much as aesthetics.

Do not use this for execution

Concept frame moodboards are for the direction-selection meeting. Once a direction is selected, run the Campaign Variant Generator or another execution-focused workflow.

Frequently asked questions

What pre-production creatives ask about concept frame workflows.

About 3 hours of focused work. 30 min direction-writing, 15 min prompt anchoring, 45 min generation, 30 min curation, 30 min layout, 15 min annotation. Plan a half-day.

Generate 10, curate to 6 to 8. The cut-down ratio matters. Presenting all 10 dilutes the strongest frames. Presenting fewer than 6 leaves the direction underrepresented.

Yes but quality drops. Reference images anchor the prompt to specific visuals; without them, the model interprets the brief more loosely. Reference anchors compress iteration.

Brief first (written or read out), then moodboard. The moodboard is the visual answer to the brief. Reviewers without the brief context interpret the frames differently.

Yes. Generate concept frames as stills first, get direction-selection, then run the selected direction through a video generation workflow. Frames are faster to iterate; video for the chosen direction.

The brief was probably not lock-tight. Revise the brief based on what the director did not like, then run 5 new directions. The moodboard surfaces brief problems early; that is the value.

Yes, this is one of the highest-ROI agency-pitch workflows. The visual demonstration of capability and direction-thinking beats a slide deck of words for most creative pitches.

Capture which direction selected, which frames within the direction landed, and which feedback applies for execution. The annotated direction selection becomes the input to the execution workflow.

Ship a moodboard before the review meeting

Concept Frame Moodboard workflow turns a written brief into a director-review-ready 5-direction moodboard in about 3 hours. Open the template and start with your brief.

Open workflow
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