Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://mintlify.com/anil-matcha/open-generative-ai/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Cinema Studio is Open Generative AI’s interface for filmmakers and photographers who want precise control over the visual language of their generations. Rather than hand-crafting verbose prompt modifiers for camera bodies, optics, and depth of field, you select your choices from structured pickers — camera, lens, focal length, and aperture — and Cinema Studio translates those selections into optimized prompt modifiers automatically. The result is a consistent, professional cinematic aesthetic without requiring deep knowledge of AI prompt engineering.
How It Works
Each control picker corresponds to a real-world cinematography concept. When you make a selection, Cinema Studio appends the appropriate technical descriptors to your prompt behind the scenes before sending the request to the generation model. You write the creative prompt (subject, action, setting) and the studio handles the technical language of the virtual camera.
Camera Bodies
Choose the camera body that defines the overall look, format, and resolution character of your shot:
| Camera | Character |
|---|
| Modular 8K Digital | Ultra-high resolution digital cinema, clean and precise |
| Full-Frame Cine Digital | Full-frame sensor depth and tonal range |
| Grand Format 70mm Film | Large-format film grain and epic scale |
| Studio Digital S35 | Super 35 digital, the industry workhorse look |
| Classic 16mm Film | Grainy, intimate 16mm film aesthetic |
| Premium Large Format Digital | Large format digital for extreme detail and shallow field |
Lenses
The lens choice shapes bokeh, distortion, and the optical personality of the image:
| Lens | Character |
|---|
| Creative Tilt | Selective focus and tilt-shift perspective distortion |
| Compact Anamorphic | Compact anamorphic flares and horizontal bokeh stretch |
| Extreme Macro | Extreme close-up detail, shallow depth of field |
| 70s Cinema Prime | Warm, slightly soft vintage cinema prime look |
| Classic Anamorphic | Wide oval bokeh and classic lens flare character |
| Premium Modern Prime | Clinical sharpness with modern optical coatings |
| Warm Cinema Prime | Warm colour rendering with cinematic rendering |
| Swirl Bokeh Portrait | Swirling Petzval-style bokeh for portraits |
| Vintage Prime | Classic vintage prime with natural vignetting |
| Halation Diffusion | Film-like halation glow around highlights |
| Clinical Sharp Prime | Maximum sharpness and high contrast rendering |
Focal Lengths
Focal length determines field of view, perspective compression, and the spatial relationship between subject and background:
| Focal Length | Field of View |
|---|
| 8mm | Ultra-Wide — extreme environment, distorted perspective |
| 14mm | Wide — expansive establishing shots |
| 24mm | Wide — natural environment, slight perspective stretch |
| 35mm | Human Eye — closest to natural human perspective |
| 50mm | Portrait — flattering compression, natural rendering |
| 85mm | Tight Portrait — strong background compression, intimate framing |
Apertures
Aperture controls the depth of field — how much of the scene is in focus relative to the subject:
| Aperture | Depth of Field |
|---|
| f/1.4 | Shallow DoF — subject isolated, background rendered as smooth bokeh |
| f/4 | Balanced — subject sharp, background slightly soft |
| f/11 | Deep Focus — foreground to background rendered sharp |
Tips for Cinematic Prompts
Write your prompt around the subject and scene — let the camera controls handle the technical language. For example: “a weathered lighthouse keeper gazing out to sea at dusk” combined with Classic 16mm Film + Warm Cinema Prime + 35mm + f/1.4 will produce a very different image than the same subject with Modular 8K Digital + Clinical Sharp Prime + 85mm + f/11.
Shallow apertures (f/1.4) work especially well with portrait focal lengths (50mm, 85mm) to isolate subjects. Deep focus (f/11) is most effective with wide angles (14mm, 24mm) when you want the entire frame to be sharp — classic for landscape and architectural shots.
Cinema Studio translates your camera control selections into prompt modifiers automatically. Avoid manually duplicating camera terminology in your text prompt (e.g. writing “shot on 16mm film” while also selecting Classic 16mm Film in the camera picker), as this may produce conflicting or redundant instructions.