Storyboard Generation Workflow
Storyboard work gets easier when prompts, references, and shot logic stay connected. That is why creators usually get better results from a workflow than from isolated image generations.
When to use this workflow
Use a storyboard workflow when you need:
- shot order before production
- continuity across scenes or characters
- faster feedback on pacing and framing
- a reusable structure for recurring content formats
Recommended workflow
- Start with the sequence, not the final frame. Break the idea into shots, beats, or scenes.
- Attach references early. Moodboards, character references, and location notes reduce drift later.
- Generate rough visual drafts. Early drafts are for direction, not polish.
- Keep revision notes beside the outputs. This helps you improve shot logic without losing context.
- Promote the winning sequence into a template. Once the flow works, save it for the next storyboard-heavy project.
What to review before moving to video
- Does the shot order feel clear?
- Are scene transitions understandable?
- Do the character and environment cues stay consistent?
- Can someone else read the storyboard without extra explanation?
Creator tip
If a storyboard feels inconsistent, the problem is often the sequence or references, not the model alone. Fix the workflow inputs before adding more generation attempts.