Feshbach resonances play a major role in translationally cold-molecule preparation. In this context, their laser control is of crucial importance. This work is devoted to the depiction of some basic mechanisms of such a control using intense, short laser pulses and referring to nonlinear multiphoton processes. Our goal is to adiabatically transport a Feshbach resonance onto a zero-width resonance, the characteristics of which have already been discussed in the literature. Three processes are then addressed: (i) during the rise of the pulse and its plateau, the preparation of a so-called laser bound molecule (LBM) still stable, but structurally different from the standard chemically bound molecule; (ii) during the pulse switching off, an adiabatic transport of this LBM on a very few excited vibrational levels, and (iii) concomitantly, a filtration strategy to photodissociate all these levels except one, giving thus rise to but a single field-free excited vibrational state. With or without an eventual stimulated Raman adiabatic passage technique to bring all the population to the ground rovibrational state, this opens an alternate for a full optical control of ultracold-molecule formation. The illustrative example, offering the potentiality to be transposed to other diatomics, is ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}^{+}$.