EnglishUser GuideStoryboard Generation

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
  1. Start with the sequence, not the final frame. Break the idea into shots, beats, or scenes.
  2. Attach references early. Moodboards, character references, and location notes reduce drift later.
  3. Generate rough visual drafts. Early drafts are for direction, not polish.
  4. Keep revision notes beside the outputs. This helps you improve shot logic without losing context.
  5. 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.

Suggested next pages