Here is the third entirely virtual fashion show! I love making these videos more and more — each one teaches me something new about storytelling with AI. This edition leans into a time-travel theme: vintage silhouettes morph into futuristic textures thanks to generative images and animation. The results aren’t perfect — far from it — but the pace at which tools are improving is breathtaking. I’m particularly amazed by Kling’s animation features (they have a launch promo: #KlingAI50off if you want to test it). Images were made with Midjourney, upscaled with Magnific_AI, and stitched together in CapCut. If you enjoy it, please share — I count on you!
Third Entirely Virtual Fashion Show , Step Into a Time-Travel Runway

Here is the third entirely virtual fashion show! I love making these videos more and more , each one teaches me something new about storytelling with AI. This edition leans into a time-travel theme: vintage silhouettes morph into futuristic textures thanks to generative images and animation. The results aren’t perfect , far from it , but the pace at which tools are improving is breathtaking. I’m particularly amazed by Kling’s animation features (they have a launch promo: #KlingAI50off if you want to test it). Images were made with Midjourney, upscaled with Magnific_AI, and stitched together in CapCut. If you enjoy it, please share , I count on you!
Shout-out to Pierrick (CharaspowerAI) , Community and Collaboration

Community is the lifeblood of experimental art, and Pierrick , mentioned as CharaspowerAI , deserves a specific thank-you. Short tweets like this usually hide meaningful help: running test renders, pointing out compositing hiccups, suggesting color grading, or simply boosting the post to wider audiences. Building virtual runway shows that blend Midjourney visuals, Magnific_AI upscaling, Kling animation, and CapCut editing is a lot faster with a friend who checks details and offers honest feedback. Public shout-outs remind everyone these projects aren’t solitary ventures; they grow through shared effort, curiosity, and the generous time contributors give. Thank you, Pierrick.
Thanks, Nina , How Peer Feedback Shapes the Runway

Nina Marshell gets a brief, warm nod , and that nod matters. Peer feedback from designers, critics, or curious followers shapes creative choices: which era to echo in a time-travel sequence, how to transition fabrics into light, or whether an animated silhouette reads as graceful or uncanny. When creators thank people like Nina publicly, it signals both appreciation and invitation to join the conversation. If you’ve ever wondered how audience reactions change a project mid-edit, these micro-interactions are it. They help refine prompts, tweak animation timing, and decide which frames to upscale. Thanks, Nina , your response helps the runway evolve.
Carine Knapen , Gratitude from the Heart

Carine Knapen gets extra hearts in the thread , and it’s a reminder that virtual fashion becomes meaningful when it connects emotionally. Whether Carine is a fellow creator, model, or fan, that little ‘thank you Carine ❣️❣️’ anchors the project in relationship-building. AI tools produce visuals, but it’s human reactions that give them warmth and context. Public appreciation also encourages others to step forward with their ideas, test renders, or styling notes. For anyone watching the show, those emojis are shorthand for trust: the community is paying attention. Big thanks to Carine and every person who clicks, comments, or shares.
Small Replies, Big Impact , Noting SFCSWII

A simple ‘Thank you’ to accounts like SFCSWII is small but meaningful. In fast-moving posts, short replies keep momentum, remind creators the work landed, and quietly influence morale. For anyone experimenting with AI-based production, affirmation from niche or specialized accounts confirms the approach is worth pursuing. These short interactions also help surface content to new audiences: a friend who retweets or replies can put the show in front of different followers, sparking conversations about technique, era choices, or animation style. If you’re reading this and appreciate the work, a quick reaction matters , it’s how small gestures become a big part of creative progress.
KhaeLuv , Loud Applause from Fans

KhaeLuv’s response , full of hearts and gratitude , highlights how enthusiast audiences keep artists going. When fans respond with repeated emojis, they aren’t just being cute; they’re signaling strong emotional resonance. That enthusiasm matters for experimental pieces that test boundaries between eras, fabric, and simulated motion. It signals what moments land and which transitions need smoothing. Celebrating these reactions helps creators decide which sequences to polish and which to save for future shows. To KhaeLuv and everyone who sends that enthusiastic energy: your cheers are noticed, they speed up the next project, and they make taking creative risks feel worth it.
Joy of Creation , JKiapesova's Note

JKiapesova’s reply , thank you! It’s a real pleasure to do it , gets to the heart of why creators keep making virtual runway pieces. That joy is the fuel that offsets long renders, prompt tweaking, and the occasional uncanny result. When someone describes the process as a pleasure, it affirms that the creative systems, tools, and community are paying off. The iterative loop , imagine, prompt, render, animate, edit , becomes satisfying rather than draining. For anyone curious about starting: the work is approachable, fun, and collaborative. If you’ve ever wanted to dip a toe into AI fashion, this is an invitation.
Final Thanks & Credits , Mari and the Tools Behind the Show

Final thanks to Mari (mari_penaranda1) and everyone who chimed in , and a quick credits rundown for those who asked how it’s made. The visuals came from Midjourney prompts, upscaled by Magnific_AI, animated with Kling_ai, and assembled in CapCut for pacing and cut. Kling’s animation tools impressed the creator so much they mentioned a launch promo: #KlingAI50off , a good entry point if you want to experiment. These pipelines change fast; what took days last year can be prototyped in hours now. If you liked this time-travel runway, please share it and help us push the next one further.