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Motion Brief supports product-shot-to-Seedance brand workflows

Amir Mushich released Motion Brief, a Claude Project that turns a product shot into motion directions, Seedance prompts and buyer/pricing guidance. Related posts show the same workflow expanding into batch product angles and video demo frames.

4 min read
Motion Brief supports product-shot-to-Seedance brand workflows
Motion Brief supports product-shot-to-Seedance brand workflows

TL;DR

  • AmirMushich's launch post frames Motion Brief as a Claude Project that takes a product shot or design, suggests motion directions, writes a Seedance 2.0 prompt, then rewrites it if the result misses.
  • The workflow does not stop at generation. According to the launch post, and reinforced by youraipulse's screenshot of the attached stats card, the assistant also packages buyer, outreach, and pricing guidance around the finished asset.
  • AmirMushich's batch workflow clip expands the idea from one-off prompting into a single-window image pipeline for camera rotation, shot generation, editing, upscaling, and aspect-ratio exports.
  • A reply from youraipulse extends that same image pipeline into video product demos by using generated images as start and end frames.
  • Motion Brief appears to be shipping in more than one form, because AmirMushich's availability reply says both a web app and GitHub version are available for the Claude Project.

You can follow the main workflow post, watch the batch-production demo, and see the business-metrics card that Mushich says explains the pitch. A later reply from AmirMushich's availability note adds that the project is available as both a web app and on GitHub.

Motion Brief

Amir Mushich's core pitch is unusually specific: turn a single brand image into a motion asset and then into a sellable deliverable. The workflow card in AmirMushich's launch post breaks it into five steps.

  • Upload any brand image, logo, mockup, or product shot.
  • Get three animation ideas from the assistant.
  • Pick one direction or combine them.
  • Receive a full Seedance 2.0 prompt for OpenArt, then iterate.
  • Get delivery guidance on positioning, pitching, and who buys this kind of asset.

The attached project screenshot shows why this looks more like a packaged workflow than a single prompt. AmirMushich's interface screenshot shows a Claude Project called “Motion Assistant (AmirMushich x OpenArt)” with custom instructions and attached markdown files.

Buyer and pricing files

The most useful detail is buried in the screenshot, not the tweet copy. AmirMushich's interface screenshot shows two project files loaded into Claude, one for channels and buyers, one for pricing.

That lines up with the last step in the workflow diagram, where the assistant shifts from generation to sales packaging. The product is part prompt builder, part motion brief, part lightweight go-to-market template.

The stats card in youraipulse's quote-post supplies the business case Mushich is using to support that packaging layer:

  • Animated GIFs in email vs static: +20 to 30% CTR.
  • Animated Meta creatives: up to 40% higher engagement.
  • Video on a landing page: up to 80% lift in conversion.
  • Motion in email: 26% more clicks than static campaigns.

Batch angles

A second post from AmirMushich's batch workflow clip widens the story beyond one hero asset. He describes a “pipeline optimisation for brands' visuals” that keeps image production in one window.

The steps are listed plainly in the post:

  1. Take the image.
  2. Rotate the virtual camera.
  3. Take shots.
  4. Edit and upscale.
  5. Resize to other aspect ratios.
  6. Download and finish in Figma or Photoshop.

The line “one designer becomes a factory” is a little breathless, but the interesting part is the workflow shape. It treats AI image tools as a batch-angle generator for product marketing, not just a place to make one polished frame.

Start-end frames

A reply from youraipulse adds one more concrete extension: generated stills can become start and end frames for product demo videos.

That gives the batch-image post a second use case. The same pipeline can feed static exports for ads and landing pages, or act as the storyboard material for short motion demos.

Availability

The availability details come from replies rather than the main post. In AmirMushich's availability reply, Mushich says both a web app and GitHub version are available.

A later thread from AmirMushich's Claude vs Gemini comments also sketches the tool context behind Motion Brief. He says Claude Projects, file uploads, skills, infographic generation, and Google Docs, Gmail, Calendar, and Drive integrations are all part of why he is experimenting with Claude, even though he still prefers Gemini for his own day-to-day style of work.

Further reading

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