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Storyboarding

Storyboarding. Storyboarding - An Introduction. Storyboards are graphic organizers in the form of illustrations or images displayed in sequence for the purpose of pre-visualizing a motion picture, animation, motion graphic or interactive media sequence.

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Storyboarding

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  1. Storyboarding

  2. Storyboarding - An Introduction • Storyboards are graphic organizers in the form of illustrations or images displayed in sequence for the purpose of pre-visualizing a motion picture, animation, motion graphic or interactive media sequence. • A presentation without a storyboard is like a cart without a horse. You have no idea which direction whomsoever is going to pull the cart. • Storyboarding is never the beginning of any creative project, because you cannot get to this stage unless your concept and vision are completely clear. If you are undertaking a project, there would be little to be gained in a storyboarding session without ideas - the storyboard is an element to capture and refine ideas, not to create them.

  3. Paper Or Screen? • If you're creating a formal storyboard, you'll have to decide if you require a paper or screen board. Both of them have their advantages and disadvantages - and both come in so many types that you can have a great time deciding which works best for you.

  4. Paper • There could be nothing easier than putting a pencil or pen onto paper and scribbling notes, drawing a prototype or creating a flow chart. • Lots of people are still wary of digital storyboards, after all the mouse or keyboard is not something with which you can cut and write or write between the lines. Things are however changing.

  5. Screen • With new technologies today, a tablet or pen emulates a regular pen, and it comes with a convenient electronic eraser to boot. You could use a speech recognition program to input ideas straight into your electronic storyboard, handwriting recognition and OCR programs can port all your existing paper storyboards onto the screen level as well. • Screen storyboards have other advantages too - you can share them over your network or the Internet, also you can store them on a digital memory source. By sharing in myriad ways, your storyboards become more collaborative, and consequently your content is richer, your ideas are originated from a higher base level.

  6. What to Use • This does not mean that paper storyboards are without benefits, not everybody carries a iPad or laptop all the time, paper is everywhere, just find an area to write, and scribble your thoughts away. • The single biggest advantage of a screen (also called digital and electronic) storyboard is duplication. • So, what do we use? Simple, we use a combination, use paper, and convert it to electronic format as soon as possible.

  7. The Flow • The flow is the unrestrained stream of thoughts originating from your creativity which forms a major part of your storyboard. • This is the link between your abstract and physical storyboards. • Keep involved with your ideas to prevent your flow from being hampered with.

  8. Storyboard Elements • Every storyboard has elements, representation of actual elements of a finished presentation. These are in the form of text, video, sound, images and more. • The storyboard is an intermediate stage, you don't put everything that's going to be a part of your finished presentation into a storyboard. • Scribbled notes are one element in a storyboard that does not make it to the final presentation. They are there to correct and add ideas; the heart of a storyboard.

  9. From Storyboard to Finality • The storyboard is an intermediate stage, concept and visualization are the beginning stages, completion and delivery are the final stages. • To finish a presentation, you don't need a finished storyboard. In fact a good storyboard will never get completed. As soon as your storyboard has a fixed direction, you should begin work on your presentation, maybe even before that.

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