Description
Storyboarding is about taking a script or a concept and turning it into a visual story using storyboards. You need to be able to draw well enough to allow yourself or your production team to envision and develop your ideas, test how they will work, and highlight any potential obstacles with the structure or layout of the story before you begin production.
Therefore you need to practice. Open a storyboard blank template and sketch your ideas. If they don't work or if you come up with a better idea, rub them out and scetch out new ones. The more you understand about how to make your production visually interesting in your sketches the better your end product will be. Add notes about what's going on in your images. Refer to the front cover to see what you might like to record in the spaces above and below each panel, but I have left the spaces blank inside the storyboard book because you will want to use different criteria according to each project, or what stage you are up to in each project.
There is an index at the front of your storyboard movie maker to bookmark whatever suits your project best. (Initial thumbnails, first draft, new chapters, new projects, particularly good ideas etc.)
By the end of the storyboarding notebook you will be able to go through your storyboard writing examples and track your progress and you will have a record of what works best for you. Do more of what worked best. I hope you become an awesome storyboarder : )
Paperback - 130 pages - 8.5" x 11"
Author: Simple Storyboards
Publisher: Independently Published
Published: 01/30/2020
Pages: 132
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.71lbs
Size: 11.02h x 8.50w x 0.28d
ISBN13: 9798606588510
BISAC Categories:
- Humor | Form | Comic Strips & Cartoons
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