Storyboard

What Are Storyboard

Storyboard are illustration that represant the shot that was ultimately make up a movie

Important Of Story Board

Help Us to Oeganize Our Thought,Making a Storyboard helps you condense all the ideas bouncing around your head int one coherent,fleshed-out vision

[❓]It helps you plan your video more effectively. Video requires you to coordinate a lot of small but important details. Because of this, it’s difficult (if not downright impossible) to create a good video on the fly. The more thoroughly you can plan your video, the better the finished product will turn out.

It helps you communicate your ideas to other people. You might be able to envision exactly how you want your video to look, but it can be hard to convey your ideas to other people using only words. A storyboard bridges that gap for you, helping your colleagues or clients envision the kind of video you have in mind.

❓ It simplifies everything that comes later. Investing some time and effort up-front in a storyboard can save you much more time, energy, and frustration later on. If you’ve got a good storyboard before you start shooting, you’ll be able to bring your video to life more efficiently, and you’ll be less likely to make expensive mistakes or waste time on ideas that don’t pan out. Having a storyboard also makes editing your video more straightforward.

How to Make Storyboard

1. Create blank sides

The first step in creating a storyboard is to draw a series of squares on a piece of paper (you can also find tons of printable storyboard templates on Google).

2 . Add your script

Beneath each picture, write the lines from the script that will be spoken in that scene and jot down some notes about what is happening.

3. Sketch your story

Next, you should sketch how each scene will look visually. Note that your storyboard doesn’t have to be incredibly detailed — you don’t have to draw in all of the props or even use color. (Hint: You don’t have to be great at drawing either. Bad drawings are far better than no drawings at all.)


Just provide enough visual detail to give an impression of what is happening, which characters are in the scene and what the general framing will look like. The script and notes will help fill in the rest of the details.

Helpful Tips to Keep in Mind

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Show, don’t tell. Use the storyboard as a litmus test to determine if your story is truly being visualized.

Be cinematic. Does your video do things that movies do? Do people, places and things move or stand still? Does the camera move? Keep these factors in mind and bring them all together to create a cinematic video.

Make sure it’s logical and coherent. You’re creating a story, so the video should look visually consistent from beginning to end

Pick a theme. If you want to create a video infographic, add relevant charts and graphs. Want to highlight a customer pain point, show a character on screen and take them through a journey.

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Include all relevant details. Break up your script into smaller chunks and make note of important information:

What is the setting or background for the scene?

Is there a character on screen? If so, what action is the character performing?

What props are in the scene? This should fit in with the context of the background / setting you’re using

Will any text appear on screen? What is the size, color, and position of the text?

What message are you trying to deliver?