Tutorial Tuesday: How to export a Two panel pdf in Storyboard Pro

Here’s a quick tutorial for Tutorial Tuesday that came out some frustration I was having with Storyboard Pro recently. The other night I had an issue with exporting a one-paneled PDF in Storyboard Pro that simply displayed the Action AND Dialog boxes below it as in the pic below.

Bunny-v1_Page_2

Seems fairly straight forward but in the default export it WILL NOT do this. I tried for quite a while to bend it to my will, but just couldn’t get what I wanted. Each time I tried to export, Storyboard Pro would either delete the Action panel, delete the Dialog panel, truncate the words or flat not show either. I couldn’t find squat about it on the web. So far Toon Boom has not responded to my requests for help. Luckily, thanks to this site, I know a great many fantastic people in the business and my good buddy Sherm Cohen of Sponge Bob, Phineas and Ferb and Kick Buttowski as well as  Storyboard Secrets fame came to my rescue! If you don’t know about his site you should finish reading this short tutorial, and head directly over there for all sorts of storyboardin’ goodness.

Anyway, Sherm helped me figure out what was wrong and with a few of my own tweaks I got exactly what I needed out of the settings finally. Below in all their glory are the way you’d pull this off. Here’s a link to the pdf Storyboard Pro spit out with these settings.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

 

 

A Very Different Toy Story

w2fvw3byxc9nwhr24ddl

i09 is reporting that toy story 3 initially had a very different story.

From the site:

Jim Herzfeld wrote one draft of Circle 7’s Toy Story 3, a script that was later polished by Bob Hilgenberg and Rob Muir (who also wrote Circle 7’s Monsters Inc. sequel script). In this version, Buzz Lightyear starts malfunctioning, so his fellow toys ship him back to his manufacturer in Taiwan. But when they learn of a massive recall on Buzz Lightyear toys, Andy’s toys fear that Buzz will be destroyed, so they head to Taiwan to rescue him. Visual development artist Jim Martin provided concept art of some of the key moments. You can see a few piece below, and more on his website.

For the rest of the story click over to their site to read on…

Incredible Time-Lapse Shows the Time Consuming Labor Behind Stop Motion Animation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF_MTFzm27A

I’ve always loved the art of stop motion. To me it’s almost like magic, whereby these actual dolls come to life, moving, singing and laughing. It’s an incredible feat of work and talent and the amount of preparation that goes into it, is truly astounding. That said, here’s a little snippet from the end credits of The Boxtrolls, which captures a tiny bit into the herculean amount of work that goes into making even one scene of stop motion animation. Enjoy!

About The Boxtrolls: A family event movie from the creators of “Coraline” and “ParaNorman” that introduces audiences to a new breed of family – The Boxtrolls, a community of quirky, mischievous creatures who have lovingly raised an orphaned human boy named Eggs (voiced by Isaac Hempstead Wright) in the amazing cavernous home they’ve built beneath the streets of Cheesebridge. When the town’s villain, Archibald Snatcher (Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley), comes up with a plot to get rid of the Boxtrolls, Eggs decides to venture above ground, “into the light,” where he meets and teams up with fabulously feisty Winnie (Elle Fanning). Together, they devise a daring plan to save Eggs’ family

You can read the whole post here.