AI-Generated UGC Shot List
Visiting a Tropical Plant Nursery
Plant shop vlog. Tropical plant nursery visit. Shots: arriving, monstera leaf close-up, hands on terracotta, choosing between two plants, repotting at home, plant on windowsill final shot. VO: care ti…
This is a 8-shot filming plan for a 30s TikTok vlog — visiting a Tropical Plant Nursery. Each shot specifies what appears on camera, the movement type, and the script or voiceover line, so you can film in sequence without stopping to think between takes. It's optimised for TikTok's fast-cut format, with the hook designed to land in the first 1–2 seconds. Use it as an on-set checklist: work through each shot in order, adjust framing to your location, and adapt the script lines to your own voice.
Shot list
- 1HOOK0–1s
Wide shot of creator walking into the tropical plant nursery, surprised expression
Text overlay:'Plant Heaven! 🌿' - 2PRODUCT1–3s
Close-up of large monstera leaf, sunlight filtering through
Voiceover:'Look at these stunning monstera leaves!' - 3PRODUCT3–5s
Hands touching a terracotta pot, feeling texture
Voiceover:'This terracotta feels perfect!' - 4PROBLEM5–8s
Over-the-shoulder shot of creator pondering between two plants
Voiceover:'Which one should I choose?' - 5RITUAL8–14s
Hand gripping a plant's stem while repotting at home, soil falling
Voiceover:'Let's get this beauty repotted!' - 6RESULT14–20s
POV shot of placing newly repotted plant on windowsill, sunlight streaming
Voiceover:'It's going to thrive here!' - 7FINAL20–27s
Wide shot of plant on the windowsill, creator giving a thumbs up
Voiceover:'Care tips for my monstera...' - 8FINAL27–30s
Close-up of monstera leaves in sunlight, camera slowly pull back
Voiceover:'...keep it bright, water every week!'
Why this format works
Vlog content works because it documents rather than performs. Without a shot list, vlogs wander — with one, you're capturing a specific story arc that audiences can follow. The difference between a vlog that gets replayed and one that gets skipped is intentional structure disguised as spontaneity.
Filming tips for TikTok
- Film your hook in the first 0.5 seconds — TikTok auto-plays without sound, so your opening visual has to carry the full weight.
- Shoot each clip slightly longer than you need. Jump cuts between takes lose energy; trim in edit, not on location.
- Natural light at a window beats a ring light for skin texture and authenticity — TikTok viewers can tell.
- Do the take you think you'll cut first, then the one you'll use. The second attempt has better pacing.
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