FAQ
WAN 2.7 Spicy FAQ: quick answers
Quick answers to the questions students ask most often about WAN 2.7 Spicy. Every answer is covered in depth in the lessons — links included.
What is WAN 2.7 Spicy?
WAN 2.7 Spicy is an image-to-video variant of WAN 2.7 with extended support for explicit content. You provide one starting frame (an image) and a text prompt describing the motion — the output is a single continuous shot. Full overview in lesson 1.
What inputs does WAN 2.7 Spicy take?
A minimal field set: one starting image (referenced as [Image 1]), a text prompt, resolution, duration, and an optional negative_prompt. Parameters are covered in lesson 4.
How long can a WAN 2.7 Spicy clip be?
Any whole number of seconds from 2 to 15 — not only 5/10/15. Match the length to the motion: 2–5s for one gesture, 6–10s for a development, longer for a full arc.
What resolutions does it support?
720P for drafts and motion tests, 1080P as the native final, and SR-upscale variants up to 1440P-SR. 480p is not supported.
How should I write the prompt?
Describe the motion, not the frame: the model already sees your starting image and needs to know what happens next. Budget 30–80 words for basic motion and 60–120 for complex scenes with an arc. The principle is lesson 2; prompt structure is lesson 5.
What goes into negative_prompt?
Artifacts and behaviors you want to exclude go into the separate negative_prompt field — built as two layers: a reusable baseline plus shot-specific additions. Don't write negations inside the main prompt. Details in lesson 8.
Which camera movements does WAN 2.7 Spicy understand?
The working vocabulary includes pan, push-in, dolly, orbit, handheld, and crane. The camera is half of a shot's motion — even a still subject comes alive with a slow push-in. The full encyclopedia is lesson 6.
How do I make a video longer than 15 seconds?
Chain clips: take the last frame of the finished clip and use it as the new [Image 1] for the next generation. WAN has no first-and-last-frame mode, so chaining is the way. Step by step in lesson 9.
How do I prompt explicit motion in Spicy mode?
Use the proven motion vocabulary — the model won't guess the motion you want — and add a Constraints block that locks anatomy, limbs, and skin behavior. Both are in lesson 10.
Where can I run WAN 2.7 Spicy?
WAN 2.7 Spicy is available in ZenCreator's Video Generator — upload a starting frame, pick the model, and describe the motion. Your first clip walkthrough is lesson 3.
Try it yourself in ZenCreator
Generate your first clip — everything this course teaches is available in the ZenCreator video tools.