Google Flow Tutorial: Create AI Videos Step by Step (Full Transcript)

Learn Google Flow’s workflow: prompt, storyboard, generate clips, keep characters consistent, edit on a timeline, export, and transform existing footage with AI.
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[00:00:00] Speaker 1: Today, I'll show you how to use Google Flow step-by-step. Google Flow is Google's AI filmmaking tool that helps you go from a simple idea to a finished video. We'll brainstorm a concept, generate a storyboard, create cinematic video clips, build consistent characters, edit our project, and even transform existing videos with AI. By the end of this video, you'll know how to create your own AI videos from start to finish. I'm Kevin, and let's dive in. First, head to flow.google. You'll find a link right here at the bottom of the screen. You'll need to sign in with your Google account. When the site loads, you'll land on the Google Flow homepage. Here, you'll see your recent projects, featured examples from Google, and right here, a button to start creating something new. To create our first AI video project, click New Project. This drops us on the main editing workspace. Along the left-hand side, you'll find your media, characters, scenes, and AI tools. In the middle is your canvas, and on the right-hand side is the AI assistant that helps you create and edit your videos. Now, right here at the bottom, we have a prompt box, and it's asking me what I'd like to create. Now, of course, this wouldn't be a Kevin Stratford tutorial without cookies, so let's try making a short commercial for the Kevin Cookie Company. Here, I'll type in my prompt, and then let's send that. Notice that Google Flow doesn't immediately generate a video. Instead, it asks a few follow-up questions to better understand what we're trying to create. So right here, what's the overall vibe? Well, I want it to be cozy and warm. Here, it asks about the hero feature. Well, obviously, it's our chocolate chip cookies, and for the visual style, I like photorealistic and maybe cinematic. So right down below, I'll type in my response, and let's send that. Based on all of the direction that we provided, Google Flow has now created a detailed storyboard for this commercial. Let's scroll up to the top and have a look. Now, right here, it calls out the characters for the commercial. We have Silas, a master baker in his late 50s, and Maya, an eight-year-old girl with a bright, curious expression. I love it. Right over here, we have the locations. We're in a kitchen, and then we also have the front counter of the store. That's great. Here, we call out props, the wardrobe, the set, and then this is really neat. It breaks down the commercial to the individual frames. So for each frame, we get the context, the action that occurs. We also get the camera angles. Here, we have the lighting, and then we also include the dialogue. And again, we do this for every single frame in this commercial, and we have six frames total that make up the commercial. Now, I really like that Flow encourages you to think through the story before generating any video. If you'd like to make any changes to this, right down below, simply describe it in the prompt box. You're only editing text at this stage, and it won't consume any credits. Video generation is what uses credits, so it's worth taking a few extra moments to refine your storyboard before moving on. Now, I think everything here looks good, so let's move on to generating a visual storyboard. Right over here, I'll click on Send. There we have the visual storyboard. This gives us a quick preview of how each scene will fit together before we generate the final videos. Overall, I think this looks great, but I did notice one small issue. Here, in frame number six, I'd like to include the text Kevin Cookie Company on the box. So here, I'll click on the storyboard, and we can give feedback right down below. I'll type this in, and then let's send that. Beautiful. Look at that. I love the text on the box. Now, the nice thing is that we're catching this now. We could refine the storyboard before spending time generating the final video clips. Let's now go back to the main view. I think this storyboard looks great, and I'm ready to start generating the final video clips. So right down below, let's type in, let's start generating individual video clips for each frame, and then I'll send that. Since generating AI videos consumes credits, Flow asks me to confirm before it begins. In this case, it's going to generate all six different scenes, and that'll cost me 90 credits. I'm good with that, so over here, I'll click on Approve. A few minutes later, Google Flow has generated all six frames from our storyboard. Now, one thing I really like is how consistent everything looks. The bakery, the lighting, the overall visual style all carry through from one scene over to the next. Now, it really feels like these clips belong in the same commercial rather than six completely separate videos. Ooh, and look at that shot. That practically sells itself. Now, if I were a better business person, I'd probably have an order link at the bottom of this YouTube video. Now, I can click into any clip, and there we can hear the sound, and if you'd like to make any changes or refinements, right here at the bottom, you have the prompt box where you can type in the changes. Google Flow has generated all of our clips, but they're all just individual shots. The next step is to combine them all into one scene so we could review the commercial from beginning to end. In the top left-hand corner, let's now go back, and over on the left-hand side navigation, let's click into Scenes, and here on the canvas, let's right-click, and here we see the option for a new scene. Let's click on that. Now, at the bottom of the screen, let's click on the plus icon to start adding some clips to this timeline. Here, I can see all the different AI-generated clips that we've created so far. Now, right here, I also like this as the opening shot. Now, over on the right-hand side, I can preview the clip, and down below, I could also trim the clip, so that way I only bring in this portion. Now, I think this looks good, so down below, let's add this to the scene. Let's add a few more clips to start building out this commercial. Click on the plus icon, let's add another clip, and this time, let's go with him stirring the cookies, and let's add that to the scene, and let's add one more clip. I'll click on the plus icon, add a clip, and this time, let's go with the cookies moving into the oven. Over here, I'll add this to the scene. Now, we have a basic video editor with a timeline. Over here, I can rearrange the clips. I'll press on this one, and I can drag that to the end. Now, I could also trim the clips to improve the pacing. Over here, I could cut the beginning, and here, I'll cut off some of the end. One feature I really like is the prompt box at the bottom of the window. Now, over here, I could select any clip on my timeline, and down below, I could describe the changes that I'd like to make to that clip, and then Google Flow will go through and update just that individual clip. Once you're happy with the final result, in the top right-hand corner, you can click on the download icon, and that'll export the finished scene with all of your different clips. If you'd rather do the final editing in software like, let's say, DaVinci Resolve, Premiere Pro, or maybe another editor, in the top left-hand corner, let's click on this back icon. On the left-hand side navigation, let's click into all media, and here, we see all the different video clips that we've generated. Now, you could hover over any one of your clips, and here, you'll see this overlay in the top right. I could click on the three dots, and here, we have the option to download just this one individual clip. One of the biggest challenges with AI-generated video is keeping the characters consistent from one scene to the next. Google Flow makes this a lot easier with its built-in character tools. Let's have a look. Over on the left-hand side, let's click on characters. From here, you can create a new character simply by describing them with a prompt. Down below, you can also upload a reference image or one of my favorites. If I click on this plus icon, you have the option to turn yourself into an avatar. That one is really cool, and I definitely recommend trying it out. So, let's try creating a character for the bakery owner. Right down below in the prompt box, I'll type in my description of Silas. Then, over here, let's generate, and there, we can see what Silas looks like. I like it. It looks good. If I want to make any additional changes, down below, I have the prompt field, and here, I could type in any edits that I'd like to make. In the top left-hand corner, I can now give this character a name. I'll call him Silas. Down below, I can also select a voice for Silas. Let's go with this one right here, and I'll add that to the character. Now, I think this looks pretty good. So, in the top right-hand corner, let's now click on done. Let's see it in action now. Down below, let's go to the prompt field, and let's type in the at symbol. This lets me reference one of the characters that we've created. Over on the left-hand side, I see characters, and there's Silas. Now, as a quick note, if you'd like to use your avatar, you can click on that, and here, you'll see your avatar. Now, let's go back to characters. I'll select Silas, and that's now inserted a reference to Silas in the prompt field, and now, I can type in the rest of my prompt. So, Silas eats a chocolate chip cookie at a busy train station. Then, over here, let's send that, and right here, let's approve it. Let's look at how it turned out. Right over here, again, we have the photo of Silas, and right next to that, we have the video that it generated using Silas, and at first glance, it looks really good. Let's play it. That looks like the same character. That's really good, and that'll make it a lot easier to build longer videos where you need the same character to appear throughout. Before we wrap up, let me show you one more feature that I think is really impressive. In addition to generating videos from scratch, Google Flow can also transform existing videos. Here, I'll upload a video of myself walking in my backyard. Here, I'll click on I agree. Now, right up above, you can see a video of me walking. Now, I'll click into it, and down at the bottom, I can now describe edits that I would like AI to make to my video. So, right over here, let's transform this scene into a snowy winter day and then run that. And right up on top, we can see how that turned out. And that's how to use Google Flow. Let me know down below in the comments if you have any questions or if there's another AI tool you'd like me to cover. Thanks for watching, and I'll see you in the next video.

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Arow Summary
The transcript is a step-by-step tutorial on using Google Flow (flow.google), Google’s AI filmmaking tool, to create an AI video from idea to export. The presenter starts a new project, prompts Flow to create a short cozy, photorealistic cinematic commercial for “Kevin Cookie Company,” answers follow-up questions (vibe, hero feature, visual style), and reviews the generated text storyboard (characters, locations, props, wardrobe, camera, lighting, dialogue across six frames). They then generate a visual storyboard, refine a detail (adding “Kevin Cookie Company” text on a box), and proceed to generate six final video clips, confirming credit usage (90 credits). Next, they assemble clips into a scene with a timeline editor, rearrange and trim clips, and use prompt-based edits on individual clips, then export the scene or download individual clips for external editing. The tutorial also covers character consistency via the Characters panel: creating a character (Silas), naming and assigning a voice, and referencing the character with @ in prompts to generate consistent appearances across scenes. Finally, it demonstrates transforming an existing uploaded video (walking in a backyard) into a snowy winter day using AI edits. The video ends with an invitation for questions and tool requests.
Arow Title
How to Use Google Flow: From Prompt to Finished AI Video
Arow Keywords
Google Flow Remove
AI filmmaking Remove
AI video generation Remove
storyboard Remove
visual storyboard Remove
prompting Remove
cinematic clips Remove
credits Remove
timeline editor Remove
scenes Remove
media library Remove
character consistency Remove
AI characters Remove
avatar creation Remove
voice selection Remove
@ character reference Remove
clip trimming Remove
export Remove
download clips Remove
video transformation Remove
style transfer Remove
Kevin Cookie Company Remove
photorealistic Remove
commercial creation Remove
Arow Key Takeaways
  • Start at flow.google, sign in, and create a New Project to access the workspace (media/characters/scenes/tools, canvas, AI assistant).
  • Flow asks clarifying questions after your initial prompt to refine vibe, hero feature, and visual style before generating a storyboard.
  • Edit the text storyboard freely (no credits) before generating visuals; video generation is what consumes credits.
  • Generate a visual storyboard to validate scenes and details early; provide feedback to refine elements like on-screen text.
  • Approve credit usage before generating final clips; Flow can create consistent-looking multi-shot outputs from a single storyboard.
  • Combine generated clips into a Scene using the timeline editor; rearrange and trim clips to improve pacing.
  • Use the prompt box to apply AI edits to a specific selected clip without regenerating the whole project.
  • Export the finished scene from Flow, or download individual clips for editing in external software (Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, etc.).
  • Create consistent characters in the Characters panel, name them, assign voices, and reference them in prompts with the @ symbol.
  • Upload an existing video and use AI to transform it (e.g., change season/weather) via prompt-based edits.
Arow Sentiments
Positive: Enthusiastic, instructional tone highlighting helpful features (storyboarding before spending credits, consistent visuals, character tools) with light humor (cookies) and satisfaction with results.
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