Freepik
Creative asset platform
Online creative asset and design platform offering stock images, vectors, icons, templates, and AI-powered design tools.

Recent stories
Freepik rebranded its AI suite as Magnific and repositioned it as one platform for image, video, audio, 3D, and collaboration. Existing accounts and plans carry over, and the shift matters because Freepik is now selling a broader creator suite instead of a standalone upscaler.
A short workflow paired GPT Image 2 art with Freepik 3D Scenes to turn flat frames into explorable environments and adjustable camera angles. The result looks useful for previs and shot framing, but the demo stays at prototype-level geometry.
Kling rolled out native 4K generation in its 3.0 video series, and partners quickly surfaced the mode across Freepik and other creative platforms. Direct 4K output changes ad, film, and client-delivery workflows that previously depended on upscaling.
Creators documented GPT Image 2 plus Seedance 2.0 workflows across Freepik, Higgsfield, and Mitte for ads, animation tests, and uncanny short clips. The pairing turns better still generation into repeatable motion pipelines, though queues and setup still slow execution.
OpenAI released ChatGPT Images 2.0, and Firefly Boards, Figma, Freepik, fal and Lovart added access within hours. The rollout matters because text-heavy image generation is now moving into the design tools creators already use.
Creators published repeatable Seedance 2.0 recipes for time-freeze scenes, tracking shots, sports-broadcast surrealism, fantasy fly-throughs, and music visuals. Several threads included full prompts, reference-image setup, and timeline instructions, so use them as workflow templates rather than finished clip examples.
Runway added 1080p output for Seedance 2.0, while Freepik shipped the same upgrade and Dreamina began phasing in 1080p downloads for paid users in several regions. Higher-resolution delivery is now available for the same model across major creator platforms.
Freepik published a Cuco B. Hops breakdown that moves from Nano Banana 2 character sheets to Seedance 2.0 scenes inside one workspace. Teams can use it as a repeatable template for cross-shot character consistency.
Creators shared Seedance 2.0 workflows across Freepik, Topview, Dreamina, OpenArt, Arcads, and InVideo, from 2-photo shots to multi-character scenes and scripted one-take prompts. Reuse reference images, timed prompt blocks, and cleanup passes if you want more consistent results than one-shot generation.
Freepik removed plan and region gates on Seedance 2.0, and Runway opened the model to all paid tiers. Posts about Higgsfield and MovieFlow also point to broader access and free trials, so creators can test availability across more platforms.
Creators documented repeatable Seedance 2.0 workflows that start with Midjourney, Nano Banana 2, or Gemini references, then use timeline prompts, frame extraction, and Omni Reference. The chains now cover action previs, music videos, and stylized scene changes, so teams can copy the workflow across editors.
A creator shared a Freepik Spaces workflow that makes 2x2 cinematic grids, extracts four stills into Nano Banana 2, then animates them in Kling 3.0 Omni. The claimed savings come from matching Omni's 10-second cap to four preplanned shots instead of larger grids.
Freepik's new 3D Scenes tool generates a full environment from one image so you can place objects and reframe like a virtual shoot. Product teams can use it for camera moves and consistency before final diffusion polish.
A Freepik Spaces walkthrough shows how creators are combining camera-shot footage, Nano Banana 2 images and Kling Motion Control in one music-video pipeline. Use it when you want stylized performance pieces without juggling as many separate tools.
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.
Freepik launched Relight in Pikaso, letting creators transfer lighting from a reference and adjust direction, intensity and color for images and video. Browser-based relighting is moving from rough correction into controllable look development, so test it for production lighting passes.
A Freepik Spaces workflow now uses Nano Banana 2 for stills, Veed Fabric for closeup lipsync, OmniHuman for directed performance, and Kling 3.0 for motion clips. Split one music video into model-specific stages instead of forcing a single tool to handle everything.
Freepik added Magnific Precision controls to Video Upscaler, including 4K output, a 12-frame preview, and sliders for sharpness, grain, strength, and FPS. Preview first, then push settings only after you know the texture treatment survives motion.
Freepik launched Speak, which turns an image plus text or audio into a lip-synced talking video with 30+ languages and a 5-minute cap. Use it for UGC ads, localized product demos, and fast talking-head tests without reshoots.