After creating, you may wish to print your storyboard to put on display or submit for an assignment! First, click on "view details" underneath the storyboard you wish to print. This will bring up the options for that storyboard. Click the orange button "view all options" and you will see a window of all of everything you can do with your storyboard as shown below.
Click "print" and you can select the format you wish to print. You may print your storyboard as one cell per page or multiple cells per page. You can even print your storyboard with lines if an assignment calls for handwritten work!
Did you know that you can print greeting cards with Storyboard That? These could be used for birthdays, holidays or just because! Imagine you want to turn the sweet storyboard below into a beautiful card for your mother for Mother's Day!
First, create a three-cell storyboard such as this one we created for Mother’s Day. This could be a short story (beginning, middle, and end), a joke, a special message to your mother, or whatever you want!
Cell 1 is the front of the card.
Cell 2 is the left inside page.
Cell 3 is the back of the card.
Storyboards of any layout can be converted into a folding card, but only the first three cells will appear. Titles and descriptions are not printed on the card, so use text boxes inside the cell if you want to include text.
After you save your storyboard, click "Make a Folding Card" and then click "Mother’s Day" (or whatever holiday you wish). The right inside page is a pre-written message that you select at this step. Choose the artwork and message that works best for you!
Print out the pop-up image, and fold.
Don't forget to sign your card!
Storyboard That currently offers holiday card templates for birthdays, New Years, Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Easter, Passover, Halloween, Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Christmas, and general Season’s Greetings. Be sure to try them all!
If you click the download button, a pop up window will appear with all of the download options available to you.
Teachers and students often use PowerPoint or Google Slides to create presentations on various topics that can be presented on the big screen in front of the class. With Storyboard That you can take your incredible finished storyboards and download them directly to a PowerPoint Presentation! Each cell will become its own slide with the titles and descriptions added. Storyboard That has provided a snazzy theme, but as you may know, once in PowerPoint, you can change the theme, add transitions and music and all sorts of dynamic effects to your presentation!
Finally, students will love turning their storyboards into a mini animation by downloading it as a GIF! This works especially well if the storyboard is large (6 or more cells) and has minor changes between each cell to show a slow progression. Check out the tutorial of how to create a GIF like the one below!
What are your favorite Storyboard That features? Is there something missing that you’d love to see? Tweet us your answers to @Storyboardthat and we’ll RT our favorites!
{Microdata type="HowTo" id="983"}Click on "view details" underneath the storyboard you wish to print, then click the orange button "view all options" and select "print". You can choose to print one cell per page or multiple cells per page, and even print your storyboard with lines if needed.
Yes, you can! First, create a three-cell storyboard (front of the card, left inside page, and back of the card) and save it. Then, click "Make a Folding Card" and select the occasion. Choose the pre-written message and artwork, print the pop-up image, and fold it.
You can download your storyboard as an image pack, a high-res image, a social media image, or a PDF. Additionally, you can download it directly to a PowerPoint Presentation or as a GIF.