Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.loraverse.io/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Dailies’ Bench Bar looks like Compose’s Bench Bar but does different work.
Ingredients and refs. Same pattern as Compose. The scene’s cast, locations, and styles toggle in or out per generation. Prior shots and frames are pickable as references. The ingredient strip plus your picked refs becomes the attachment set. What makes it into the final video depends on what the chosen model accepts.
Compile. A sparkle button on the Bench Bar. Click it, and Loraverse drafts a video prompt from the structure you’ve built (shot direction, motion camera, motion direction, cast, references) and lands the result as a prompt block in the Beat Sheet for you to review. This is the deliberate version of what happens automatically in Compose. In Dailies, the prompt is something you can read, edit, and refine before generating. Video models reward thoughtful prompting. The explicit step exists because the cost of a bad take is higher than the cost of a bad frame.
Custom Skill. You can author your own Compile assistant. A personalized prompt compiler that knows how you like to prompt video. Loraverse’s default Compile is the headstart. Your Custom Skill is the version tuned to your taste and your model.
Three modes
Single Take
Multi-Shot
Reference-to-Video
One shot, one video.
Multiple cuts within a single render, with per-shot timings.
Feed many panels and let the model decide cuts and pacing.
The Bench Bar adapts to which mode you’re in. Layout, fields, and what’s required all shift to fit the job.