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Keywords:
Sketch,
Cartoon,
Depict,
Scene,
Illustrate
Storyboard is a simple 3D graphic editor where the user manipulates points and spans triangles between them.
A highly visual format used for both documenting and communicating the highlights of a team's work that uses a descriptive series of pictures and graphs accompanied by text.
A visual outline of the narrative of a video production.
A visual planning device for sketching a sequence of frames for a comic strip, film, video, and so on.
a range of images put together to tell a story and which displays a designer's initial ideas of how the product is to be used.
Storyboard is a form-based document where an SME or ID types in the content that will appear screen by screen in an online lesson, indicates the learning objective for that content, and a description of any graphic, animation, sound, video etc. that will go with it. Sometimes it may also include sign-off dates for SME approval and other project management fields. Typically, side layout information is not (should not be) included into the storyboard.
A series of panels roughly depicting scenes, copy, and shots proposed for a television commercial. The storyboard gives the client a good idea of the agency's concept for a commercial, before extensive production charges are incurred.
A series of pictures (traditionally sketches) designed to show how a production will look. Comic books are essentially storyboards. Storyboards and subsequent sequences can be created by manipulating images from the digitized footage in a bin.
a series of individual drawings or photographs which depict the frames of a proposed production. Often used in client presentations or pre- production meetings.
a plot or outline of a game presented as a series of sketches; used typically during the initial development of levels, game play, and when mapping out character options/actions. See Super Storyboard).
Storyboarding is a method used by educators, web developers, and media artists to graphically model how a project and its associated events will appear in the final state. Storyboarding can provide instructors with some tools to make the transition to online teaching a more rational process. See chapter on Storyboarding to Success.
A series of drawings with captions, used to plan out a video before it is shot.
A series of illustrations or layouts showing a program s video and audio sequences in chronological order.
A series of diagrams that show how a project will look when completed.
A graphic plan for the frame-by-frame action in a film or on video. Usually done sequentially, a complete storyboard represents a print rendition of the final film or video product.
a plan for each additional screen in the learning program that is not included in the sample section. Each storyboard identifies the objectives to be addressed, how the content will be presented, audio and visual materials used on that screen (if any), and programming instructions (such as links to Web addresses).
A chart or diagram showing the sequence, organization and action of a hypermedia program or presentation.
a collection of black-and-white pencil or ink sketches that visually tells a story
a collection of sketches of how you want each page to look and a blueprint for success
a collection of still drawings, words and technical instructions that describe each scene of the game
a comic-strip version of a filmic sequence
a document which shows each shot in the sequence of the film
a drawing, a map, that shows an overview of how the major elements are related and the sequence in which the viewer or user might encounter them
a flowchart that diagrams the flow of pages within your web site
a frame-by-frame drawing of screens showing transition and appearance
a good idea to sketch out, before you begin adding content and design elements
a graphical depiction of the application
a graphic, sequential depiction of a narrative
a large display area (section of a wall, or a board or poster) that allows a team to display its work publicly in an ongoing, structured, and visually understandable way
a low fidelity prototype consisting of a series of screen sketches
a mockup combining copy and visual material to show the sequence of major scenes in the commercial
an animation in outline form - a high level sequence of sketches showing the structure and ideas of animation
an illustrated scene-by-scene plan for how the story is to be told, the message you want to convey, and how the overall audience experience will look and feel
an image or powerpoint or visio diagram showing the primary pages in the site and their connectivity
a panel or series of panels of rough sketches outlining the scene sequence and major changes of action or plot in a production to be shot on film or video
a Preview of the graphic job to realize
a quick paper and pencil depiction of how the system will appear to its end users
a rendering of what the art director believes the scene will look like, prior to filming, based on his reading and understanding of the screenplay and collaboration with the director
a representation of a particular interaction sequence
a rough draft sketch of what each card will look like
a rough sketch of an anticipated video shot
a script (often visual and pictoral), like those you see on DVDs
a sequence of captions or
a sequence of diagrams that show the key changes to a scene as it undergoes an animation
a sequence of images and words drawn together on a page to form a plausible
a sequence of pages (or rectangles drawn on paper representing the pages) with explanatory text
a sequence of sketches showing major actions or outlining a process, such as the steps of interacting with a computer or website
a sequence of UI design sketches that show what a user workflow might look like
a series of illustrations detailing what a film, an animation, a game or a multimedia project will look like when completed
a series of illustrations that represent a process, such as the steps of interacting with a computer or website
a series of panels, each containing a "scene" of the video
a series of pictures which shows how each shot in a scene will be filmed
a series of quick sketches that reveal the activity of a story
a series of simple sketches and descriptions used in the concept stage of filmmaking to plan a filming sequence
a series of sketches, or notes, about what you will talk about
a series of sketches that illustrates the shots you plan to film
a series of slide images that works rather like one of those cartoon flipbooks
a series of still images that shows how the elements will move and interact with each other
a series of visual images that simply and briefly illustrate key scenes and events in a presentation, film, or video
a set of drawings depicting a set of user activities that occur in an existing or envisioned system or capability
a sketch of how to organize a story and a list of its contents
a sketch of the home page and each page it will link to
a step-by-step illustration of the entire project
a visual script for your project
a visual script that shows what the key scenes will look like
a written and visual outline of the show that allows you to have a very clear idea what you may want to book
A series of drawings that reveal the sequence of shots in the order they are to be seen. The storyboard effectively communicates the requirements of each shot to each of the keys (heads) of each department. Storyboards look like a comic strip and show all the action in the scene.
artist rendering of how a scene might look, with specific details for camera, lighting etc.
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