Brennan, John., Carmichael, Evan. Presentation Tip: Create a Storyboard that Sells. Retrieved from
http://www.evancarmichael.com/Sales/395/Presentation-Tip-Create-a-Storyboard-that-sells.htmlhttp://www.evancarmichael.com/Bussiness-Coach/6767/Could-You-Be-The-Worlds-Best-Visual-Storyteller.html
Hey I just saw this great set of tutorials for storyboarding! Plus it's Spongebob. :-)
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Thanks! I'll take a look at it.
DeleteI'm making a horror game right now, one which I plan to make heavily story-driven. Usually when I'm writing an essay or story, I tend to make an outline and fill in the bits inbetween. Is there a storyboard equivalent to this? As in: making a frame for the first act, second act, and third act; then move on to the second part of the first act, the second part of the second act, et cetera.
ReplyDeleteOh absolutely,however to storyboard an act is quite a feat... Typically far too much happens in an act to storyboard it properly. An average storyboard covers about a scene's worth of action. This is where the frame reference box comes in. The first number might represent the act and the second number the scene. It could even be possible to break a scene into several storyboards. It depends on the planning and purpose.
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