Added: 3 years ago
From: myfrenchlingo
Views: 64,377
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (51)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • What do you use to draw it??

  • For those who want to be a storyboard artist it's not much different from drawing comic books. It is but yet it's not as Comic Books have more detailed but if you start a job in comics and are succuessful you can easily land a job as a storyboard artist and other art jobs. :)

  • AMAZING!

    

  • GOD BLESS YOU!!!

  • i dont have to dream i can draw like this.is why i need the wacom cintiq 21ux but it cost 2gee$ what damn thats alot of bread i wanna make my own movie so badly i'm so crack 4 white who dont no what that means "the best".

  • @TheMOEBUCKS if you really can draw like that, then a bamboo will suit you fine. Bamboo works great, especially if you prefer to draw with your wrist and fingers, and it only cost about 60 bucks. Alternatively you can just get a sick scanner for one or two hundred. Cintiqs are bad ass, but I've seen people do more with less so don't stress it.

  • i wish i could draw like that.

  • I LIKE IT

  • im making one now -_- so scruffy but if you get the jist i guess it's alright :)

  • the narration of the drawings is really annoying but it wasn't to bad

  • Very childish, but i couldnt help but laugh at "knock out a masterpiece"..

  • hey, I'm pretty much of an ignorant for filmmaking and stuff, but... Are the shots supposed to be strictly based on the storyboard? I mean... who leads those things? the guy with the storyboard or the guy with the camera?

  • storyboards are a planning tool but the DIRECTOR must not be married to the shot. The PERFORMANCE should motivate the shot, NOT the other way around. On set things may be better another way...if you have storyboards at least you know what you're changing from!

  • think it would have been good to do a rough up of the bruegel painting behind you at the start - to show what film maker would get to set out that scene.

  • wow, how fast was that!

  • Hello Gus, Thanks for a wonderful tutorial on storyboarding. I miss the old days when nearly all film shoots had the integrity & class to use storyboards, such a valuable tool in the filmmaking process. Best wishes, Hunter in The States

  • good luck! hope to see you in the big screen! I have a question for you, I am a young scholar who wants to get into the film industry, any tips? thank you!

  • Hey Young Scholar,  After 29 years in the film industry, I can tell you: It's not hard to get IN to the film industry. It's hard to get OUT! (not kidding) My papa once warned me: "The alternative to a 9 to 5 job is often 7am until midnight." Keep that in mind.

  • Thank you very much! may I ask you what do you do?

  • sweet dude! awsome drawing!

  • thx, helpful

    I have the same rubber (LOL) ;D

  • nice vid!

    but somehow ur breathing inhaling makes me hard to breath also for some reason................- -

  • Really , it has a completely different effect on me: it makes me hard.

  • hm, one thing that's missing in this workflow is structure - I think it makes more sense to start roughing out the overall structure, and capture the gesture in the drawing, and Then add detail. starting to draw with a detail like hair and then add more details like eyeglasses and so on can't possibly lead to a clear, good n correct drawing. unless you can visualize things amazingly well, but probably not even then.

  • This storyboard artist is offering his advice based on decades in this profession(and obviously quite successful). I think you can get a lot from his tutorial, unless you'd rather re-invent the wheel. HM, also a few decades in the industry

  • i just got out of a concept art class and we had to do storyboards then revise it and render it and i must say storyboarding is not the easiest thing. almost a art inside a art. its one thing to have a sequence in your head, then to put it on paper. gets alittle touch

  • Probaly a stupid question, but I notice it was a regular pencil rather than a technical one. Does that make difference?

  • Hi Mangapulse,

    I use Staedtler mars lumograph pencils, (usually 6B) and for quick

    tone use Faber-Castell PIT Graphitkreide 6B.

    Good luck with the drawing ...Keep on truckin.

  • If you ve been freehand sketching for a long time u would perfer a wooden pencil than a technical one, wooden pencil needs sharpen alot but if u use right u can find ways to keep the tip sharp as u draw and also u can use other bits of the pencil tip for different line thickness and good for shading too, over all it produces a more organic stylish natural looking sketch rather than a bold techical one

  • I'm expected to draw at least 100 of these by this tuesday. College film classes are hard!

  • lol i drew 900 in 3 days...

  • im thinking of going to film school and DAMN

  • Yep, that's a lot of frames.

    Very glad a college is teaching storyboarding. It's the next best thing to being a director.

  • Crazy good.

  • i dream about being able to draw like this...

  • @luckierer

    its all about understand and then practice. Thats it!!!!

  • Comment removed

  • ii thought that also - its disturbing me , haha

  • hey he's a big guy he musn't be very healthy

  • i like how he does it so quick, doesn't add much details, but gets the message across

  • @JeffZHigs1 : Well that's the idea of a storyboard, isn't it? Love how creative he is, I need a lot more time to think of how I might draw it. Interesting how he moves his hand over the paper real quick sometimes, I've seen this with a lot of drawers when they imagine something.

    @luckierer: like nike says: just do it. You need at least some talent to be a real artist but in order to "only" be pretty good, all you need is a steel will (or passion ;p)(sry to all y'all if my english is a bit off)

  • @JeffZHigs1 you mean sketching?

  • Excellent work sir!!! I am doing a story board for a movie out of collage.

  • Wow! He is amazing!

  • Comment removed

  • Comment removed

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more