Create a vertical 2:3 "motion class poster storyboard" visual board for the following class.
Course type: {{course_type}}
Instructor or subject: {{instructor_or_subject}}
Movement sequence: {{movement_sequence}}
Visual mood: {{visual_mood}}
Poster copy: {{poster_copy}}
This is not an ordinary event poster, generic sports advertisement, cinematic storyboard, or comic story page. The image should feel like a ready-to-use class promotion and content-operations board: polished enough to work as a poster, but structured clearly enough to show a teachable movement sequence.
First understand the course type, demonstration subject, action order, and visual mood. Then select 6 to 8 key movements from the movement sequence and organize them into clear motion cards or storyboard panels. Each card must show the same instructor or subject in a different pose. The identity, body proportions, hair silhouette, main outfit colors, and key recognizable features must stay consistent; posture, limb direction, balance, hand and foot placement, and expression may change with each movement.
The composition should combine a course poster with a movement storyboard sheet. Reserve a clean title area at the top or side using the short title or subtitle from the poster copy. The main area should contain 6 to 8 motion cards with clear spacing, thin rules, numbering, short labels, or light magazine-collage borders. A corner or bottom band may include two slightly larger key-frame areas for the opening pose and the closing pose, like references for start and end frames, but do not create a video interface.
The motion cards should make the class feel learnable and followable, not like random fashion poses. Each movement needs a readable body silhouette, clean limb separation, and clear weight direction. You may add tiny arrows, rhythm lines, posture guide lines, numbered dots, or very short pose names, but keep text minimal, large, and legible. Avoid dense micro text.
The visual language should be professional, clean, and suitable for class promotion. Derive the background, color, and material from the visual mood: bright studio, soft paper texture, light magazine collage, clean gym, calm rehab clinic, dance classroom, martial-arts training hall, or another course-appropriate space. The whole board should share one consistent layout system. The cards may vary slightly in angle and framing, but they must not look like unrelated images piled together.
If the instructor or subject comes from a game, film, book, brand, or fictional world, preserve recognizable character identity, core palette, costume family, elemental cues, props, and world signals, then translate them into this motion-class teaching format. Do not copy official screenshots, UI, logos, card layouts, or promotional poster compositions. Do not force source-case yoga mats, yoga studio props, or morning-light motifs into unrelated courses.
The final image should clearly show what class this is, how the same subject performs a sequence of motions, and which frames could serve as promotional poster cards or start/end-frame references. Prioritize same-subject consistency, readable motion, clear class purpose, and polished layout. Avoid single large sports ads, pure fashion campaigns, film previsualization boards, children's storybook panels, ordinary comic storyboards, random collages, changing the subject between cards, confusing action order, severe anatomy errors, too much text, garbled text, watermarks, logos, overly clinical warning diagrams, and decorations that obscure the class theme.