Introduction to Storyboarding
How to Name Your Scenes and Present Your Work
A course by Laura Ewing Ferrer , Character Designer and Storyboarder
About the video: How to Name Your Scenes and Present Your Work
Overview
“The first step in the post production phase is to work on the presentation. I will give you tips on how to organize your camera shots well.”
In this video lesson Laura Ewing Ferrer addresses the topic: How to Name Your Scenes and Present Your Work, which is part of the Domestika online course: Introduction to Storyboarding. Learn how to translate a script into creative illustrations that tell a story.
Partial transcription of the video
“How to Name your Scenes and Present your Work In this lesson, I'll go over some details on how to make your storyboard clear to other people. Let me show you how I do it. When we're working for a team, what we need to remember is we are a few people so we don't all have the same methods and organisation skills, but we need to keep it as clean and organised as we can so that there's no confusion in between and we have a chaotic work experience. What I would recommend is always write the sequence number you're given on the top, then the camera number, and every time there's a new shot, you ch...”
This transcript is automatically generated, so it may contain mistakes.
Course summary for: Introduction to Storyboarding
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Category
Illustration -
Software
Adobe Photoshop -
Areas
Art Direction, Audiovisual Production, Concept Art, Digital Drawing, Digital Illustration, Storyboard, Traditional illustration

Laura Ewing Ferrer
A course by Laura Ewing Ferrer
Laura Ewing is a freelance illustrator and storyboarder with a passion for animation. As a young girl, she would spend hours watching documentaries and DVD extras of her favorite animated films, in disbelief that creating these stories was a real job.
She went on to study Graphic Design, with a specialization in illustration, to then study Fine Art at The Florence Academy of Art in Italy, and obtained her Master’s degree in storyboarding at Lightbox Academy.
Her diverse experience in the industry includes working in-house at Smile and Learn, as well as working as a freelance artist for documentaries, pilot series, and publishing houses. She most recently worked on a storyboarding project for a live-action movie, which will be released in 2021 and for Madrid 2120 as a storyboard artist, which received this year’s Goya award for best short animation.
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