Storyboarding

Luis Carbajal

Storyboarding


basic-a4-storyboard-template.pdf

In the last activity, you provided feedback to your peers and received feedback on your project ideas. Review the feedback you received before starting this assignment. You'll need to decide with your partner which one project direction you will proceed with for the remainder of the studio.

Prompt

To better explain and envision our project/process/product, designers and engineers create drawn storyboards. Below is a small template you should use to create your storyboard. Feel free to adapt it in any way you feel.

Instruction:

Create a 6-panel storyboard that creates a story of how someone would use your project. There is a template (attached above) you can download and print, or you can use a ruler and a clean sheet of paper to make your storyboard. 

Set the Scene

Problem to Address


Introduction of your Product/Intervention


Detail/Feature





Detail/Feature




Outro 



A storyboard should include the following: 

  1. Set the Scene - In what world/environment/situation are we looking at? 
  2. What is the Problem? - Why is your device/object needed? Present the problem.
  3. Designed Intervention - Draw and introduce the overall project concept. 
  4. Detail/Feature - Draw specific components that are important. This is where diagramming different states would be useful. How is this actuated or used? Is it interactive?
  5. Outro - Solution/Conclusion! How this project improved the user's health

Deliverable

In the "Responses tab" above, upload your storyboard.