Freepik Spaces supports music-video builds with Nano Banana grids, OmniHuman lipsync and Kling 3.0
A new shared Space shows how to build a music video inside Freepik using Nano Banana shot grids, OmniHuman or Veed Fabric for lipsync, and Kling 3.0 for motion. The pipeline is now reusable instead of scattered across separate tutorials and tools, so teams can follow one workflow.

TL;DR
- Freepik now has a shared music-video workflow that keeps image generation, lipsync, and animation inside one reusable Space, according to the shared Space thread.
- Techhalla’s demo post shows the setup can hold character consistency across a full clip while adding camera motion and stylized cuts.
- The workflow splits jobs by model: Nano Banana for shot grids and closeups, OmniHuman or Veed Fabric for lipsync, and Kling 3.0 for band animation, as laid out in the step-by-step post.
What the shared Space covers
The main addition here is packaging a music-video build as one Freepik Space instead of a scattered chain of separate prompts and tools. Techhalla’s demo video shows a finished clip with consistent characters, animated inserts, and synchronized singing, while the companion Space is shared directly for reuse via Freepik Spaces.
Where each model fits
The thread maps a clear production split. Nano Banana 2 is used first to turn a reference image into a 1970s radio-DJ look, then expand coverage with a 3x3 grid and extra closeups for band members. OmniHuman 1.5 handles lipsync with camera moves and stronger facial expression control; Veed Fabric 1.0 is presented as the faster alternative when you do not want to prompt. Kling 3.0 then animates the supporting shots from single images or start/end-frame inputs to build the final performance sequence.