visualcreator in a worn carhartt jacket, grain-of-the-cloth visible. close on the inner tag.
dialoguei paid fourteen dollars for this jacket in 2018. i have worn it almost every winter since.
fashion content lives or dies on visual identity. but the script still matters — most viewers read on-screen text more than they listen, and the wrong word ruins a great fit. the generator writes fashion scripts where the on-screen text and the dialogue do different jobs, and the visual carries the look.
a 30s tiktok about finding a vintage carhartt jacket for $14 that the creator has now worn for seven years.
a 30s tiktok about finding a vintage carhartt jacket for $14 that the creator has now worn for seven years.
visualcreator in a worn carhartt jacket, grain-of-the-cloth visible. close on the inner tag.
dialoguei paid fourteen dollars for this jacket in 2018. i have worn it almost every winter since.
visualcut between archive photos: 2018, 2020, 2022, 2024 — all featuring the jacket. it gets visibly more worn-in.
dialoguethe lining is gone in two places. the cuffs have rolled themselves into a permanent shape. it fits me better now than the day i bought it.
visualcreator close-up, holding open the jacket to show the worn lining and the original tag.
dialoguethis is the case for vintage. not because it's a trend. because something built in 1994 has already proven it can survive me.
visualcreator zips the jacket up. walks out of frame.
dialoguei thrift one of these every saturday. follow if you want the receipts.
yes — but the words should be sparing. the generator leans heavy on on-screen text (brand names, prices, sizes) and keeps the voiceover short. no narrating the visual.
satirical and dramatic both perform well in fashion right now — the genre rewards a strong point of view. educational works for vintage or technical content. avoid 'serious' unless you're a brand voice.
by leading with the why. a grwm script that opens 'i broke up with him last weekend, here's the dress' lands. one that opens 'today i'm getting ready for dinner' doesn't. specificity is the lever.
yes — sign in with google, walk through a 90-second onboarding, and start generating scripts. there's no paywall on the core generator right now. paid features may come later, but the v1 is free.
openai's gpt-4o, with a structured output schema that enforces shot-by-shot format. that means the script always comes back as labeled shots with separate fields for visual, voiceover, dialogue, on-screen text, caption, and hashtags — never as a wall of text.
90 second onboarding tunes the generator to your niche. drop one line, get a full script.