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Tencent SkillHub ยท Content Creation

Photo Captions

Generate platform-tuned social media captions for photography. Use when a user shares a photo and wants captions for posting. Triggers on sharing photos with...

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Generate platform-tuned social media captions for photography. Use when a user shares a photo and wants captions for posting. Triggers on sharing photos with...

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Install for OpenClaw

Quick setup
  1. Download the package from Yavira.
  2. Extract the archive and review SKILL.md first.
  3. Import or place the package into your OpenClaw setup.

Requirements

Target platform
OpenClaw
Install method
Manual import
Extraction
Extract archive
Prerequisites
OpenClaw
Primary doc
SKILL.md

Package facts

Download mode
Yavira redirect
Package format
ZIP package
Source platform
Tencent SkillHub
What's included
README.md, SKILL.md

Validation

  • Use the Yavira download entry.
  • Review SKILL.md after the package is downloaded.
  • Confirm the extracted package contains the expected setup assets.

Install with your agent

Agent handoff

Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.

  1. Download the package from Yavira.
  2. Extract it into a folder your agent can access.
  3. Paste one of the prompts below and point your agent at the extracted folder.
New install

I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.

Upgrade existing

I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.

Trust & source

Release facts

Source
Tencent SkillHub
Verification
Indexed source record
Version
1.2.3

Documentation

ClawHub primary doc Primary doc: SKILL.md 15 sections Open source page

Photo Captions

When the user shares a photo with context (location, camera, lens, film stock, subject, mood), generate captions for all platforms below in one response. Each platform has a distinct voice and format. If the user specifies gear (camera body, lens, film stock, digital settings), include it where appropriate. Don't fabricate gear details the user didn't provide.

๐Ÿ“ธ Instagram

Tone: Short, evocative, slightly poetic or witty. Let the image speak. Format: 1-2 line caption โ†’ blank line โ†’ gear line (if provided) โ†’ blank line โ†’ hashtags. Hashtags: Exactly 5 tags (Instagram's current limit). Pick the 5 most impactful: prioritize genre (e.g. #filmphotography), location, film stock/gear, and one mood/style tag. Quality over quantity.

๐Ÿ“ท Flickr

Tone: Slightly more descriptive and contemplative. Flickr audiences appreciate story and craft. Format: Italicized title, dash, then 1-3 sentences of context/story. End with gear info. Include: Location context, what drew the photographer to the shot. Think photo essay voice.

๐Ÿฆ X (Twitter)

Tone: Punchy, concise, dry. Under 280 characters ideally. No hashtag spam. Format: One strong line about the image. Gear at the end if it fits naturally. Goal: Makes someone stop scrolling.

๐ŸชŸ Glass

Tone: Photographer-to-photographer. Understated, genuine. No hashtags, no engagement bait. Format: 1-3 sentences. Location and brief observation. Gear on a separate line with middle dots (ยท) as separators. Vibe: Like talking to a friend at a photo walk.

๐ŸŸฆ Tumblr

Tone: More literary, expressive, slightly longer. Tumblr appreciates mood and storytelling. Format: Bold location as title. 2-4 sentences of narrative/reflection. Gear line. Then tags. Tags: Use spaces in Tumblr tags: #film photography not #filmphotography. 8-12 tags.

๐Ÿ”ต Bluesky

Tone: Conversational, warm, community-minded. Similar energy to early Twitter. Format: 1-2 sentences, casual but thoughtful. Under 300 characters. Gear mention optional. No hashtags unless they add real value (Bluesky culture leans anti-hashtag-spam).

๐Ÿงต Threads

Tone: Casual, Instagram-adjacent but more conversational. Think talking to followers, not curating a gallery. Format: 1-2 sentences, relaxed. Gear mention if interesting. Minimal hashtags (3-5 max).

๐Ÿ”ข 500px

Tone: Technical and craft-focused. 500px is a photography-first community that values technique. Format: Title line, then 1-3 sentences covering the shot โ€” technique, conditions, what made it work. Always include full gear details. Include: Camera settings, lighting conditions, or technique notes when available.

๐ŸŸ  Reddit

Tone: Authentic, slightly self-deprecating, community-friendly. No self-promotion vibes. Format: Post title (concise, descriptive) + comment body with context and gear. Title: Location or subject + gear in brackets, e.g. Bombay Beach [Canon EOS 1V, Tri-X 400] Comment: 2-3 sentences of context/story. Mention relevant subreddits: r/analog for film, r/photography for digital, r/streetphotography, r/LandscapePhotography, etc.

๐Ÿ‘ค Facebook

Tone: Personal, conversational, like sharing with friends and family. Most accessible voice. Format: 2-3 casual sentences. Story-driven โ€” where you were, what you were doing, why it caught your eye. Gear mention only if it adds to the story. No hashtags (or 1-2 at most). Facebook audiences care about the story, not the craft.

๐ŸŽž๏ธ VSCO

Tone: Minimal, poetic, understated. VSCO is the quiet gallery โ€” let the image breathe. Format: 1 line max. Sometimes just a single word or short phrase. No hashtags. Vibe: Think whispered, not announced. VSCO captions are closer to titles than descriptions. The less you say, the better. No gear talk unless it's film stock and even then, keep it subtle.

๐Ÿ“ Substack

Tone: Narrative, essayistic, author-voiced. Substack readers expect prose โ€” this is a photo caption inside a long-form piece, not a social post. Format: 2-4 sentences that work as in-line caption text below a photo in a newsletter. Rich with context โ€” where you were, what you noticed, why it stuck. Reads like a magazine photo caption crossed with a personal essay fragment. Include: Gear if it adds texture to the story. Location and conditions. The feeling behind the frame, not just the description of it. Vibe: New Yorker caption meets travel journal. Specific, unhurried, earned. The reader should feel like they're getting the real story, not a caption. No hashtags, no engagement bait, no calls to action.

๐Ÿ“Œ Pinterest

Tone: Descriptive and searchable. Pinterest is a discovery engine โ€” think SEO meets aesthetics. Format: Two parts, both required: Title: Short, keyword-rich (5-10 words). Format: [Subject/Mood] โ€” [Location] or [Style] [Subject], [Location]. Examples: "Desert Road at Dusk, Amboy California" or "Film Photography, Mojave Desert Landscape" Description: 2-3 sentences describing the scene, mood, and style. Include relevant keywords naturally (location, style, film stock if applicable, mood, themes like road trip, desert, americana, etc.) Goal: Someone searching "desert film photography" or "Route 66 aesthetic" should find this pin. No hashtags โ€” Pinterest uses keywords in descriptions for discovery, not tags.

Guidelines

Adapt all captions to the specific photo content, location, and mood. Don't repeat the same phrase across platforms. Each should feel native to its community. Humor and wit are welcome but should match the photo's mood. If the photo is black and white, add relevant B&W tags where appropriate. Never be generic. Every caption should feel written specifically for that image. For film photos, lean into the analog aesthetic. For digital, focus on the moment and technique. If the user only wants specific platforms, generate only those. Write like a human, not a copywriter. No emdashes (โ€”) anywhere, ever. No semicolons for drama, no overly polished prose. Use periods, commas, and natural sentence breaks. If you wouldn't say it out loud, don't write it. The middle dot (ยท) is fine for gear lines on Glass/Flickr/500px only. Banned phrases: "doing its thing", "golden hour doing its thing", "light doing its thing" โ€” never use this construction. Find a more specific, concrete description of what the light/fog/water is actually doing.

Category context

Writing, remixing, publishing, visual generation, and marketing content production.

Source: Tencent SkillHub

Largest current source with strong distribution and engagement signals.

Package contents

Included in package
2 Docs
  • SKILL.md Primary doc
  • README.md Docs