Introduction:
This is part two of my storyboarding, showing the other half of my storyboard. The reason I broke up the assignment into two blog posts is so people can properly look at and examine each picture I took and drew for the storyboard. Sheet 3 is for close-up shots to capture small details in objects and actor's faces/body language as well as foreshadowing. Sheet 4 is for any camera works I wanted/ needed to work on, so I chose two new angles as well as camera sizes since I wanted to use them in my movie once I mastered them (hint). Creating the actual storyboard was hard because I knew what I wanted to do, but it was hard to make it "come to life" and draw it on the paper, especially since I'm not the best drawer and my partner was out sick for the week and couldn't do most of it. You don't need any specific skills to create a storyboard except an idea and a place to draw your idea(s). I did the research and found what kind of angles and sizes we can combine together while she drew what she could, which was 1-3 and I 4-8. I took some inspiration from companies like Sony and Dreamworks and watched videos on how they did storyboards (the link is down below). Fun fact Companies like Dreamworks and Sony re-draw their storyboards 5 times before they actually start animating the product they're doing in order to get the right design.
Reflection:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7mlneY-E6ac
(Sony storyboard artist Patrick )
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