Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports natural-language image creation, reference images, style transfer, portrait and character reference, multi-image blending, and local re-editing in a flexible image workflow.
How Does Kling IMAGE 3.0 Local Re-Editing Change Visuals?
Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports local re-editing with natural-language instructions, including adding, removing, or modifying visual elements in an image workflow.
This makes local re-editing useful for practical changes such as adjusting a product detail, changing a background object, modifying an expression, or refining a visual element.
For best results, describe the target area and the desired change plainly, and state which surrounding details should stay consistent.
IMAGE 3.0 Workflow | Supported Capability | Prompt Focus |
Local re-editing | Add, remove, or modify visual elements. | Name the target area and the desired change. |
Reference images | Use up to 10 reference images. | State which subject, style, or tone each reference should guide. |
Style transfer | Use a reference style in a new image direction. | Describe brushwork, color, composition, or material quality. |
Multi-image blending | Blend features from multiple references. | Clarify the role of each reference. |
Reference Image | Promopt | Output | |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ![]() | Replace the elderly man in Image 2 with the man from Image 1, keeping the original tone and atmosphere, and replicate the man's expression. | ![]() |
Why Is Multi-Image Reference Important for Consistent Characters?
Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports extracting features from up to 10 reference images. These references can help lock in subject contours, core elements, and tonal qualities for character design, brand visuals, comics, and other consistency-heavy work.
Reference images can guide several parts of the result:
1. Subject Features: Preserve recognizable traits such as face, clothing, product shape, or object details.
2. Style and Tone: Carry color, lighting mood, material quality, and visual atmosphere into the new image.
3. Composition: Use reference material to guide angle, framing, pose, or scene relationship.
Combining references should feel like a coherent image, not a collage. Keep the instruction clear about which reference supplies the subject, which supplies the environment, and which supplies the style.
How Should Creators Balance Multiple References?
Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports multi-reference creation. A clear prompt can assign a role to each reference in plain language.
For example, ask the model to keep the character from one image, use the background from another image, and apply the lighting mood from a third image. This keeps the creative direction readable and easy to follow.
What Does IMAGE 3.0 Omni Add?
Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni focuses on cinematic narrative stills and richer image storytelling. It supports Image Series Mode and direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output, helping creators build connected visual sequences and high-resolution professional materials.
Use IMAGE 3.0 for flexible image generation, local re-editing, style transfer, portrait or character reference, and multi-image blending. Use IMAGE 3.0 Omni when the workflow needs Image Series Mode or direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output.
Feature | Kling IMAGE 3.0 | Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni |
Core workflow | Natural-language image creation, reference images, style transfer, portrait or character reference, multi-image blending, and local re-editing. | Cinematic narrative image creation with Text-to-Image, Image-to-Image, and Image Series workflows. |
Reference use | Up to 10 reference images for subject contours, core elements, and tonal qualities. | Reference-supported image storytelling and series workflows, including Text-to-Image Series, Image-to-Image Series, and Multi-Image-to-Image Series. |
Series workflow | Use standard image creation, reference images, and local editing workflows. | Image Series Mode, including Single-Image-to-Series Images and Multi-Image-to-Series Images. |
Resolution | Use the current IMAGE 3.0 image workflow shown in the product. | Direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output. |
Image workflows should stay focused on still-image creation, editing, references, resolution, and series output.
1K | 2K | 4K |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Why Is 4K Output Useful for Professional Image Work?
Direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output belongs to Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni. It supports more detailed textures, smoother color transitions, and higher-resolution outputs for professional displays, posters, brand visuals, product texture shots, pre-visualization, and scene design.
High-resolution image output is valuable when the final asset needs to preserve fine detail, readable materials, and a polished presentation at larger sizes.
How Does Image Series Mode Help With Large Projects?
Image Series Mode is an IMAGE 3.0 Omni capability. It supports Single-Image-to-Series Images and Multi-Image-to-Series Images, helping creators generate connected storyboard-style images with stronger logical coherence and narrative flow.
Series workflows are useful for concept art, storyboards, brand campaigns, and visual systems where multiple frames need a shared subject, style, and atmosphere.
How Can Creators Control Results with Clear References?
Control comes from clear reference selection and direct image-edit instructions. Name what to keep, what to change, and which reference should guide each part of the final image.
A strong prompt should say what to keep, what to change, which reference to follow for each element, and what style or tone should guide the final image.
What Is the Future of Cinematic Image Workflows?
Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports natural-language image creation, reference images, and local editing. Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni extends image workflows with Image Series Mode and direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output.
These tools are most effective when creators give clear instructions about subject identity, style, composition, and the role of each reference.
Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports local re-editing, up to 10 reference images, style transfer, portrait or character reference, and multi-image blending. Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni adds Image Series Mode and direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. What Are the Primary Differences Between Local Re-Editing and Full Scene Generation?
Full scene generation creates an image from a prompt or reference-driven instruction. Local re-editing focuses on changing a selected detail or part of an existing image while keeping the rest of the image direction clear.
Q2. How Does Multi-Image Reference Secure Character Consistency Across Different Scenes?
Multi-image reference lets the model use several images to understand a subject, style, or composition. Kling IMAGE 3.0 supports up to 10 reference images, helping creators preserve key features across new scenes and visual directions.
Q3. How Should Creators Describe Local Edits?
Describe the target area and the intended change directly. For example, explain what object should be added, removed, resized, recolored, or restyled, and state which surrounding details should remain unchanged.
Q4. Which Model Supports Direct 2K/4K Image Output?
Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni supports direct 2K/4K Ultra HD output. This is useful for professional image workflows such as posters, brand promotional images, product texture shots, film pre-visualization, and scene design.
Q5. How Can Image Series Mode Improve Narrative Visuals?
Image Series Mode helps create connected storyboard-style images with a shared visual direction. It supports Single-Image-to-Series Images and Multi-Image-to-Series Images, making it useful for storyboards, brand design, character design, wallpaper creation, and social media content production.
Join Kling AI Today
Kling IMAGE 3.0 provides a versatile foundation for multi-reference creation and local editing. Kling IMAGE 3.0 Omni adds Image Series Mode and direct 2K/4K output for high-resolution, connected visual storytelling.
Open Kling AI and choose the IMAGE 3.0 or IMAGE 3.0 Omni workflow that matches the project: local re-editing, multi-reference creation, Image Series Mode, or direct 2K/4K output.














