SirMasterSteven
storyboard example
What Is A Good Storyboard
A good storyboard will provide a clear and concise plan of your video and is a pre-production plan of what you aim to produce. It allows visual communicate to your target audience, through a series of carefully drawn images and narrative, the storyline and the sequence of events that come together to form your video.
A good storyboard should go through the following steps:
Establish parameters i.e. main events and their chronological order;
Decide on key scenes
Level of Detail – Create a “Shot List” if you are going to break it down shot by shot;
Decide what you want each cell to show and write a brief description;
Create your storyboard template using a suitable medium;
Sketch out your storyboard in low detail focusing on key areas, adding dialogue, length of each scene and a cell reference;
Review & Finalise - Share your preliminary storyboard with a third party to ensure accuracy of flow, scenes are in perspective and make sense;
Digitise your storyboard using an appropriate medium e.g. Photoshop;
Notate each frame of your storyboard e.g. dialogue, length and camera positioning; &
Prepare you work for presentation by incorporating them into a suitable medium e.g. PDF in Acrobat Pro.
A storyboard shouldn’t constrict your ideas, let it change / develop as you go through the process, incorporating new ideas.
Storyboard “URL” Link
Illustrations By: Vikki
Source: vikkimediablog.blogspot.com
www.bing.com/images/search?q=good+storyboards+with+timing...
storyboard example
What Is A Good Storyboard
A good storyboard will provide a clear and concise plan of your video and is a pre-production plan of what you aim to produce. It allows visual communicate to your target audience, through a series of carefully drawn images and narrative, the storyline and the sequence of events that come together to form your video.
A good storyboard should go through the following steps:
Establish parameters i.e. main events and their chronological order;
Decide on key scenes
Level of Detail – Create a “Shot List” if you are going to break it down shot by shot;
Decide what you want each cell to show and write a brief description;
Create your storyboard template using a suitable medium;
Sketch out your storyboard in low detail focusing on key areas, adding dialogue, length of each scene and a cell reference;
Review & Finalise - Share your preliminary storyboard with a third party to ensure accuracy of flow, scenes are in perspective and make sense;
Digitise your storyboard using an appropriate medium e.g. Photoshop;
Notate each frame of your storyboard e.g. dialogue, length and camera positioning; &
Prepare you work for presentation by incorporating them into a suitable medium e.g. PDF in Acrobat Pro.
A storyboard shouldn’t constrict your ideas, let it change / develop as you go through the process, incorporating new ideas.
Storyboard “URL” Link
Illustrations By: Vikki
Source: vikkimediablog.blogspot.com
www.bing.com/images/search?q=good+storyboards+with+timing...