Website video by Greg Hawkes Video Productions in Basingstoke Hampshire this video shows Storyboard artist Gus Russell explaining how he goes about visualising movie sequences for the movie industry and lots of others.
Website video by Greg Hawkes Video Productions in Basingstoke Hampshire this video shows Storyboard artist Gus Russell explaining how he goes about visualising movie sequences for the movie industry and lots of others.
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What the?!?!
lololol
xD
“JESUS!”
you can draw even better!
you just have to Believe! (Jesus said you could even move mountain if you only could believe). Believing means you will try and try again, and practice makes perfect! You can! You can! Move mountains! Draw! Jesus! You can! Hope i helped ^_^ God bless!
3 years later can you draw like this now?
how to become storyboard artist?
I use the same rubber!
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.
you mean sketching?
GOD BLESS YOU!!!
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 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”.
i wish i could draw like that.
its all about understand and then practice. Thats it!!!!
I LIKE IT
@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)
im making one now -_- so scruffy but if you get the jist i guess it’s alright
Very childish, but i couldnt help but laugh at “knock out a masterpiece”..
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!
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?
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
Thank you very much! may I ask you what do you do?