Full content visit >>http://www.makingcomics.com/2014/02/05/
Don’t look so confused.
Sure,
an article about storyboarding may not be the first thing you’d expect
on a site about making comics. Art, writing, marketing — these clearly
apply to comics as they do many other creative pursuits. But
storyboarding? That’s a movie-making technique.
While
it’s true that storyboarding is an efficient process for visualizing a
movie or television show prior to filming, storyboards actually share
many similarities with comic books. They both tell stories through a
sequence of drawings, using the same composition and framing techniques
to help the audience follow along. Another shared attribute, one few
people realize, is that each medium is transitory. Storyboards are meant
to be tools that facilitate a film. They aren’t intended for public
consumption, and exist only to serve the final form of the project.
Comics are storytelling tools as well. No individual panel or drawing is
meant to interfere with the story. The action exists in the imagination
of the reader. (more…)
- See more at: http://www.makingcomics.com/2014/02/05/#sthash.LD2EuhSv.dpuf
Don’t look so confused.
Sure,
an article about storyboarding may not be the first thing you’d expect
on a site about making comics. Art, writing, marketing — these clearly
apply to comics as they do many other creative pursuits. But
storyboarding? That’s a movie-making technique.
While
it’s true that storyboarding is an efficient process for visualizing a
movie or television show prior to filming, storyboards actually share
many similarities with comic books. They both tell stories through a
sequence of drawings, using the same composition and framing techniques
to help the audience follow along. Another shared attribute, one few
people realize, is that each medium is transitory. Storyboards are meant
to be tools that facilitate a film. They aren’t intended for public
consumption, and exist only to serve the final form of the project.
Comics are storytelling tools as well. No individual panel or drawing is
meant to interfere with the story. The action exists in the imagination
of the reader. (more…)
- See more at: http://www.makingcomics.com/2014/02/05/#sthash.LD2EuhSv.dpuf
Don’t look so confused.
Sure,
an article about storyboarding may not be the first thing you’d expect
on a site about making comics. Art, writing, marketing — these clearly
apply to comics as they do many other creative pursuits. But
storyboarding? That’s a movie-making technique.
While
it’s true that storyboarding is an efficient process for visualizing a
movie or television show prior to filming, storyboards actually share
many similarities with comic books. They both tell stories through a
sequence of drawings, using the same composition and framing techniques
to help the audience follow along. Another shared attribute, one few
people realize, is that each medium is transitory. Storyboards are meant
to be tools that facilitate a film. They aren’t intended for public
consumption, and exist only to serve the final form of the project.
Comics are storytelling tools as well. No individual panel or drawing is
meant to interfere with the story. The action exists in the imagination
of the reader. (more…)
- See more at: http://www.makingcomics.com/2014/02/05/#sthash.LD2EuhSv.dpuf
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