Adds additional support for the following camera commands in the prompt:
The camera pans up
The camera pans down
The camera pans left
The camera pans right
The camera zooms in on <object>
The camera zooms out
California AB 2013 Training Data Disclosure
This LoRA was fine-tuned using visual data consisting of synthetic clips. The training data may include copyrighted material owned by third parties. No training data was licensed or purchased. This LoRA is provided for non-commercial use only under the terms of its distribution.
The dataset consists of 188 clips. This is the total used for training after low quality sets were culled. Dataset was created in 2026.
Image data was processed through standard resizing, cropping, normalization, and labeling steps. Synthetic images were included as part of the training dataset.
This model is intended for non-commercial, experimental, and educational use. Generated outputs may reflect copyrighted visual styles or themes associated with the underlying training data. Users are responsible for ensuring compliance with applicable copyright law, other intellectual property laws, and all other applicable laws.
Description
FAQ
Comments (9)
To be clear, this was trained on LTX 2.0, and not LTX 2.3? I know the base model says 2.0, and the version number simply says "LTX 2", but I just wanted to make sure that was intentional, since it's been so much time since 2.3 came out.
Yes, that is correct. This was trained on the 2.0 model and at the moment is the only version. I plan to create a 2.3 version as well once I get through my backlog of untrained datasets, but the only current version of this model is for 2.0.
The 2.3 version is now out!
Just so curious question, but would a 2.0 lora work on 2.3?
some
I've heard mixed results, but I've now released a 2.3 native version, so if you're using 2.3, I would use that model instead of this one.
I tried it on 2.3 and it worked fine.
So you know for the LTX 2.3 version, there isn't a such thing as a "pan up" or "pan down" in film. Think "panorama" or "panoramic", which widens the view. Cameras move along that axis to pan.
The terms for up/down movement are Tilting, and Pedestaling / Booming. Tilting is when the camera is fixed, but angles upward or downward. Pedestaling or booming is when the camera rises or drops. Pedestaling is the television term (moving the camera up/down along a straight vertical axis), and booming is used in film, due to the difference in equipment. If it's a very large rise/drop, it's "crane" or "jib", again, due to the difference in equipment.
"Pedestal" is the term used generically for rising/falling, if not considering the exact equipment used. But in your case, "tilting" seems like the term that would match what you're doing. But the shots look a bit confused, which might mean that you mixed pedestaling and tilting in your data. Same goes for the pan left/right, which it seems you might have mixed with some "trucking" footage, meaning the camera was moved on a path left/right instead of simply turning. Turning is "panning".
This seems to work well! I've been waiting for a dedicated camera control lora for a while so I don't have to switch out loras every time I want the camera to do something slightly different. This seems to fit the bill.