Video Loom

Kling capability guide

What Kling can do inside Video Loom.

Kling connects to Video Loom through a direct API integration with fast and Master quality tiers. This page lists the current capability facts — reference handling, lip sync, and extend support — and how Kling fits a routed project.

Video Loom routing scenes to Kling AI

Where Kling AI fits

Kling AI is one of the configured video providers Video Loom can route a scene to. Image-to-video shots that need stronger reference adherence on the Master tier, plus lip-sync or extend follow-up passes.

  • Master tier accepts multiple reference images on image-to-video calls.
  • Lip-sync and temporal-extend routes are available via dedicated endpoints.
  • Fast and Master tiers let you trade speed for reference fidelity per shot.

Capability facts from the model catalog

These facts are read directly from the Video Loom model catalog for every registered Kling AI model, so they stay accurate as tiers change.

  • Registered models: 4.
  • Max clip duration: 10s.
  • Supported resolutions: provider default.
  • Reference image support: Yes (up to 4 per call on some tiers).
  • Multi-reference input: Yes.
  • End-frame continuity: No.
  • Source-video input: No.
  • Lip sync: Yes.
  • Temporal extend: Yes.
  • Native audio output: No.

Plan, route, and finish around it

Kling AI shots stay inside the same storyboard, continuity library, and timeline as every other configured provider, so switching models never means switching workspaces.

  • Per-scene provider and model overrides.
  • Continuity anchors and reference frames travel with the request.
  • Generated takes finish on the same timeline as source and other-provider clips.

Questions

What teams ask before routing a shot here.

What is the difference between Kling fast and Master tiers?

Master tiers accept more reference images per image-to-video call; fast tiers trade that for quicker, lower-cost generation.

Does Video Loom support Kling lip sync and extend?

Yes, through dedicated Kling lip-sync and extend endpoints alongside the primary text/image-to-video routes.