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Behind the Boards: A Blog by Artist, Paul Temple

Welcome to the blog! Here you'll find insights into the art of storyboarding, concept development, shooting boards, and visual storytelling for film, television, and advertising. From camera planning techniques to the emotional impact of character design, this is where I’ll share my expertise honed over a decade of working with directors and top brands. Whether you're a creative director, filmmaker, or agency looking to elevate your pitch, this blog reveals how powerful visuals drive unforgettable stories.

Questions? Email me at paul@paultemplestudios.com

Storyboard for Pepsi Zero’s “Great Acting, or Great Taste?” Superbowl LVII commercial featuring Ben Stiller. Art by Paul Temple.

Storyboard for Pepsi Zero’s “Great Acting, or Great Taste?” Superbowl LVII commercial featuring Ben Stiller. Art by Paul Temple.

Why Directors Depend on Storyboards to Save Time, Cut Costs, and Keep Production on Track

Paul Temple August 18, 2025

Filmmaking is complicated. There are countless moving parts, dozens of departments, and every minute on set costs money. For directors, the pressure is constant. Every shot, every angle, every camera move needs to be thought through well before the crew hits record. That is where storyboards come in. A storyboard is not just a collection of pretty pictures. It is a map, a schedule, and a shared language that keeps the production running smoothly, efficiently, and within budget.

When a director hires a storyboard artist, they are getting more than an illustrator. They are getting someone who translates the vision into clear, actionable visuals. These visuals communicate ideas to every department, from cinematography to art, from set design to stunts. A well-drawn storyboard allows the director to show the team exactly what he wants before the cameras roll. The storyboard is the plan that keeps the train on its tracks.

Communication: A Universal Language for the Crew

One of the biggest challenges on any set is communication. Directors often work with large, diverse teams, and even simple instructions can get lost in translation. Storyboards solve that problem. They give everyone the same visual reference.

Consider a scene with multiple actors, practical effects, and a complicated camera movement. Without a storyboard, the director might spend hours explaining what he wants to the cinematographer, the art department, the gaffer, and the talent. Misinterpretations can happen, leading to mistakes and wasted time. With a storyboard, every department sees the same visual language. The cinematographer understands framing, the art department knows set requirements, and the stunt coordinator sees exactly when and where action happens. The storyboard turns abstract ideas into concrete instructions.

A storyboard also helps when pitching to producers or clients. Seeing the sequence visually builds confidence that the story will play out as intended. It prevents ambiguity and reduces the number of questions the director has to answer on the fly. Clear communication saves time and helps the whole team focus on their work.

Efficiency: Keeping the Production Train on Schedule

Let’s return to the train metaphor. Imagine the director as the conductor of a train, with a team of crew members working as the operators, engineers, and attendants. The storyboard is the train schedule. Each frame represents a stop along the journey. The director sees where the train needs to stop, how long to linger at each station, and when it is time to move on.

When every stop is planned visually, the crew knows exactly what to prepare for. The camera operator knows which lenses to have ready. The set designer knows which props to stage. The lighting team knows how to shape the mood. Everyone is working in sync, moving efficiently from one stop to the next.

Without storyboards, production runs risk of delays. Crew members may guess what the director wants, which often leads to confusion, reshoots, or wasted time resetting equipment. A storyboard gives the conductor confidence that the train will move smoothly from station to station, maintaining momentum without surprises.

Budget: Avoiding Expensive Surprises

Every minute on set costs money. Storyboards are a tool to prevent costly mistakes before the cameras roll. They highlight potential problems and allow the team to plan solutions ahead of time.

For example, a storyboard might reveal that a crane shot or a complex action sequence is logistically impossible with the current setup. Adjustments can be made in pre-production rather than wasting an entire day on set. Similarly, storyboards help identify which shots are necessary and which are extraneous, reducing the number of takes and minimizing overtime.

By planning each moment visually, directors can allocate resources efficiently, avoid unnecessary expenditures, and keep the production on budget. Storyboards provide the foresight that protects both time and money, turning potential chaos into a predictable, manageable process.

Headache Prevention: The Hidden Value of Planning

Production days are stressful. Directors, producers, and crew members are constantly juggling multiple priorities. Storyboards act as a buffer against chaos. They give the team confidence that there is a plan and that every department knows what to do.

When a scene is visualized in advance, last-minute surprises are minimized. The director can focus on performance, pacing, and storytelling instead of constantly problem-solving technical issues. Everyone knows the plan, and everyone trusts that the director has a clear vision. The storyboard becomes a source of reassurance, reducing tension and making the production run more smoothly.

Collaboration: Aligning the Creative Vision

Storyboards are more than logistical tools. They are also collaborative instruments that bring creative partners onto the same page. Directors, cinematographers, production designers, and even clients can all see exactly what the scene will look like. This alignment is critical when working on complex productions.

A storyboard allows everyone to discuss the story using a shared visual language. Feedback can be implemented before production, not after hours of shooting. This fosters collaboration and ensures that the final product reflects the director’s vision without costly corrections or miscommunication.

Subtle Pacing and Emotional Flow

A storyboard also helps directors manage emotional pacing. Each frame is like a signpost showing how the audience will experience a scene. Storyboards let directors control how long to linger on a character’s expression, how to transition between moments, and how to maintain rhythm across the story.

This careful planning guides the audience’s emotional experience. Just as the train lingers at certain stations, giving passengers time to take in the surroundings, storyboards let the director control when to hold a moment of tension, when to release it, and when to move on. This control over emotional tempo is subtle but crucial for effective storytelling.

Conclusion

Directors rely on storyboards for more than pictures on paper. They are essential tools for communication, efficiency, budgeting, collaboration, and emotional pacing. Each frame shows the crew what to do, how to prepare, and how long to spend on each moment. Like a train schedule, the storyboard keeps the production moving smoothly, avoiding confusion, preventing costly mistakes, and allowing the director to focus on storytelling.

Hiring a skilled storyboard artist is an investment in the success of a production. The storyboard becomes the director’s map, manual, and schedule all in one, guiding the team through every stop along the journey. Whether for a commercial, short film, or feature, storyboards are the foundation for a production that is clear, efficient, and creatively satisfying.

📩 Reach out: paul@paultemplestudios.com
🎨 Explore more: www.paultemplestudios.com

Want more blog posts on this topic?
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In Film, AI, Shooting Boards, Storyboards Tags storyboard artist, shooting boards, preproduction
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Concept Art for Firelight Creative’s “Eden’s Twilight” film project. Art by Paul Temple.

Concept Art for Firelight Creative’s “Eden’s Twilight” film project. Art by Paul Temple.

Setting the Emotional Tempo: How Storyboards Shape the Audience’s Experience

Paul Temple August 14, 2025

When people talk about storyboarding, most think about simple sketches that outline a scene or show camera angles. But great storyboards do so much more. They set the emotional tempo of a film or commercial, shaping how the audience feels, thinks, and reacts throughout the story.

In this post, I want to dive into what emotional tempo means, why it is vital in storytelling, and how a well-crafted storyboard guides directors, editors, and creatives to bring that tempo to life on screen.

What is Emotional Tempo?

Emotional tempo is the speed and rhythm at which a story’s feelings unfold. It influences tension, excitement, intimacy, or calmness and helps shape the viewer’s emotional response.

It is closely linked to pacing, which is the timing of cuts, camera movements, and scene durations. But emotional tempo goes beyond timing. It includes the way moments breathe, how silence or stillness lingers, and how intensity rises and falls.

Getting this right can make the difference between a flat story and one that resonates deeply.

Why Emotional Tempo Matters in Storytelling

The audience’s experience is not just about what happens but how it happens. The tempo controls their heartbeat, their focus, and their emotional connection.

Think about a dramatic moment in a film. Holding a close-up on a character’s eyes as they hesitate can stretch time and build suspense. On the other hand, quick cuts and rapid camera moves in an action scene pump up adrenaline and excitement.

If the emotional tempo is off, scenes can feel rushed, confusing, or dragging. A great storyboard anticipates these effects and guides the creative team to hit just the right note.

Advanced Techniques for Controlling Emotional Tempo in Storyboards

Many assume pacing is just fast or slow, but it is really about how timing and rhythm shape the story’s feeling. Here are some filmmaking techniques that influence emotional tempo — and that a skilled storyboard artist needs to understand and represent clearly.

Ellipses and Expansions

Filmmakers often choose to skip certain events or linger on small details. This technique, called ellipses and expansions, shapes how time feels within the scene.

For example, omitting mundane actions and jumping directly to a key emotional moment speeds up the pace while expanding on a subtle gesture or glance slows it down to build tension or intimacy.

A well-drawn storyboard shows where these time shifts happen so everyone is aligned on the story’s rhythm.

Juxtaposition of Parallel Storylines

Many films and commercials cut between multiple storylines. Changing the tempo between these storylines creates contrast and emotional complexity.

One storyline might move with quick cuts and urgency while another unfolds slowly and deliberately. When these intersect, the contrast amplifies the impact.

Good storyboards carefully plan these shifts so the audience’s emotions are guided effectively through both threads.

Overlapping Action and Reaction Shots

Timing the cut between an action and the reaction is a powerful pacing tool.

A quick cut from an action to a reaction shot speeds tempo and urgency. Holding on a reaction shot, especially a silent or ambiguous one, can slow tempo and create suspense or emphasize emotional weight.

Storyboard artists must map out these moments precisely to communicate the intended emotional beats.

Rhythmic Editing Patterns

Repeating shots or similar framing with slight changes can create hypnotic or anxious moods.

For instance, a sequence where cuts get progressively faster can mimic a rising heartbeat or panic.

Storyboards can illustrate these patterns with notes on shot length and transitions so editors and directors know the emotional flow being aimed for.

Setting Emotional Tempo Through Camera Choices

The storyboard is the blueprint for how the camera will capture the story’s tempo.

  • Shot selection: Close-ups invite intimacy and expose subtle emotions, while wide shots emphasize isolation or environment.

  • Camera movement: A slow push-in heightens tension or focus. A fast pan or whip cut suggests urgency or surprise.

  • Lighting and color: Harsh shadows can imply danger or conflict, while warm tones suggest comfort or nostalgia.

A storyboard that incorporates these elements guides the production team to capture the desired emotional tempo visually.

Why the Human Touch Matters in Shaping Emotional Tempo

In an era when technology can quickly generate images, the subtlety and nuance needed to set emotional tempo come from an artist who understands storytelling deeply.

A good storyboard artist not only sketches what happens but interprets subtext and emotional undercurrents. They know when to pause a scene visually and when to push it forward. They think in terms of timing and rhythm and communicate this clearly to the whole team.

This kind of intuition comes from years of experience watching films, understanding human emotion, and mastering visual storytelling.

Real-World Example: Crafting Emotional Tempo for a Commercial

On one recent project, the script called for a heartfelt moment between a parent and child after a long separation.

Instead of jumping immediately to an embrace, I chose to storyboard a slow build-up: lingering shots on hesitant glances, slight shifts in body language, and a gentle, steady camera push-in.

This pacing gave the scene breathing room and allowed the emotion to unfold naturally on screen.

The director told me the boards helped them visualize how to slow down a moment that could have otherwise felt rushed or cliché.

Emotional Tempo and Collaboration

Storyboards are a communication tool. They let directors, editors, cinematographers, and producers see the intended emotional pace before filming begins.

When everyone understands the tempo early, the entire production runs smoother. Decisions about camera setups, shot durations, and editing rhythm are aligned with the story’s emotional goals.

Tips for Working with Storyboard Artists on Emotional Tempo

If you’re collaborating with a storyboard artist and want to ensure your story’s emotional tempo comes through, here are a few tips:

  • Discuss the feelings and mood you want for each scene, not just the actions.

  • Ask your artist how they plan to show timing and rhythm in the boards.

  • Be open to sketches that play with pauses, lingering shots, or subtle gestures.

  • Provide feedback on how the boards make you feel and whether the tempo matches your vision.

Final Thoughts

Emotional tempo is the heartbeat of your story. It controls how the audience connects with your characters and experiences your narrative.

A skilled storyboard artist brings this tempo to life on the page, giving your creative team a clear guide for making your story resonate deeply.

If you want storyboards that do more than just outline action, but actually shape the emotional journey of your film or commercial, then let’s talk. I’m here to help you set the perfect tempo for your next project.

📩 Reach out: paul@paultemplestudios.com
🎨 Explore more: www.paultemplestudios.com

Want more blog posts on this topic?
1. Understanding Context and Subtext: Why Choosing the Right Storyboard Artist Matters
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The Human Element: Why Observation Still Beats AI in Visual Development
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Storyboards and Cinematography: Speaking the Same Language

In Film, Storyboards
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Storyboards for Fifth Third Bank Ad Pitch. Art by Paul Temple.

Why Animatics Aren't Just for Animation

Paul Temple August 11, 2025

When most people hear the word “animatic,” they immediately think of cartoons. Makes sense. Animation studios use animatics as part of their pre-production process. But animatics are so much more than a step in making cartoons. They’re a powerful tool in live-action filmmaking, advertising, and just about any project that needs a clear visual game plan before cameras roll.

If you’ve ever tried to get a team aligned on timing, tone, or camera movement using only a script or static storyboard frames, you know how easily things get lost in translation. That’s where animatics come in. They give you timing, pacing, and even sound design in a way that brings the whole vision together.

Let’s dig into why animatics deserve a spot in your toolkit, even if you’ve never touched a cartoon in your life.

What is an Animatic?

An animatic is basically a storyboard that’s been edited into a rough video sequence. It’s made from storyboard frames timed out to match the script, with sound effects, music, or voiceover added. The result is a simplified version of your project that plays like a film—no guesswork required.

For example, say you’ve got a 30-second commercial. You can sketch out all the key shots and assemble them in a timeline that shows how long each one lasts, where transitions happen, and how dialogue fits. Suddenly, everyone from your producer to your editor knows exactly what’s going on.

Who Uses Animatics (and Why)?

Filmmakers: For directors, animatics help clarify camera angles, blocking, and pacing before anyone steps on set. They’re especially useful for action scenes, VFX shots, or anything with complex movement.

Agencies: In advertising, animatics are used to pitch and pre-test commercial ideas before production. Clients can visualize the ad without having to imagine what a static frame means. That means fewer revisions and more confidence on all sides.

Production Teams: Editors, cinematographers, and even composers benefit from a well-structured animatic. It sets the rhythm of the piece, showing where to hit emotional beats or transition between ideas.

Animatics vs. Storyboards: What’s the Difference?

Storyboards are the backbone. Animatics are the muscle. Both are vital, but they do different jobs.

A storyboard helps visualize the plan. But an animatic brings the plan to life. Once the storyboard frames are timed out and sequenced, you can start to feel the momentum of the piece. Even a few seconds of music or a subtle pause in dialogue can change how a scene feels—and an animatic is where you spot that.

When to Use an Animatic

You don’t need an animatic for every project. But here are some moments when it can save you time, money, and headaches:

1. Complex Sequences: If your project includes stunts, effects, or tightly choreographed scenes, an animatic can help prevent expensive mistakes on set.

2. Client Approvals: Some clients have a hard time visualizing from boards alone. An animatic gives them something closer to the final product, which can speed up approvals.

3. Pitching a Concept: Whether it’s a commercial, short film, or brand video, showing a moving animatic adds a professional polish that makes your pitch more convincing.

4. Editing Prep: Animatics give editors a sense of timing before footage even exists. That means fewer reshoots and more efficient post-production.

Real-World Example: Commercial Work

Let’s say you’re creating a 60-second spot for a beverage company. There are multiple characters, two locations, and a lot of quick edits to hit. You’ve got great boards, but the pacing is tricky. Should the hero moment last 4 seconds or 6? Should the cut between scenes be hard or dissolve?

With an animatic, you can test all of this before anyone calls “Action.” You drop the boards into a timeline, add temporary voiceover and a music bed, and now the entire flow is visible. You might even discover a scene that feels unnecessary, saving your client time and budget.

The Benefits Go Beyond Clarity

Here’s what animatics bring to the table beyond just visuals:

  • Timing and Rhythm: This is huge. Animatics let you fine-tune the flow of your piece. You’ll catch moments that drag or transitions that feel abrupt.

  • Mood Setting: Adding sound design or music, even temporarily, completely changes how a scene feels. It sets the emotional tone long before final production.

  • Cross-Team Communication: Whether you’re working with agency creatives or a film crew, animatics speak a universal language. Everyone sees the same thing, which cuts down on miscommunication.

  • Creative Discovery: Sometimes, once you see things in motion, new ideas emerge. You realize a scene works better in a different order, or that a moment should linger just a beat longer. That kind of insight is priceless.

Don’t Overthink It

You don’t need Pixar-level animation skills to make an animatic. Simple drawings, even rough sketches, can be enough. What matters is how the scenes are cut together and how the pacing supports the story.

In my own work, I’ve used everything from pencil sketches to full grayscale illustrations depending on the project’s needs. The key is making sure the visual intent comes through clearly.

Tips for Making a Strong Animatic

Start with solid boards: The clearer your key frames are, the better your animatic will work.

Keep it moving: Animatics don’t have to include every single frame. Focus on moments that convey action, change, or emotional shifts.

Use scratch audio: A temporary voiceover track or music bed can do wonders. It doesn’t have to be final, but it should represent the tone you’re aiming for.

Test and tweak: Once assembled, watch it with fresh eyes—or better yet, show it to someone who hasn’t seen the boards. What do they pick up on? Where do they get confused?

Animatics as a Confidence Booster

There’s nothing quite like heading into a production day knowing exactly what you’re shooting and why. An animatic gives you that confidence. It helps your team stay aligned, minimizes surprises, and sets the creative tone early in the process.

It’s a tool, yes. But it’s also a mindset. Using animatics shows that you value preparation and storytelling, not just execution.

Final Thoughts

So the next time you’re planning a shoot, whether it’s a brand campaign, a short film, or anything in between, consider adding an animatic to the mix. It doesn’t have to be fancy. Just functional enough to let the story breathe and the visuals land.

If you’re looking for help with storyboards or an animatic that fits your project, I’d love to hear from you.

📩 Reach out: paul@paultemplestudios.com
🎨 Explore more: www.paultemplestudios.com

Want more blog posts on this topic?
1. The Art of the Pitch Starts with the Right Visuals
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From Pitch to Production: Winning Clients with Storyboards
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Storyboard Revisions: Knowing When to Refine and When to Simplify

In Advertising, Storyboards Tags anamatics, storyboards, ad pitch tips
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Single storyboard frame from a Marriot Hotels ad pitch. Art by Paul Temple.

Understanding Context and Subtext: Why Choosing the Right Storyboard Artist Matters

Paul Temple July 31, 2025

When telling a story visually, the details beneath the surface are often the most important. Context and subtext are what give a narrative its depth and emotional resonance. They shape how an audience feels and what they understand without it ever being explicitly stated.

For filmmakers and creative teams, storyboards are more than just a sequence of images. They are the visual interpretation of those layers, the blueprint for emotional storytelling. Choosing a storyboard artist who truly understands context and subtext can mean the difference between a flat, literal sequence and a compelling story that resonates.

What Are Context and Subtext in Visual Storytelling?

In simple terms:

  • Context is the environment and situation around the story, the who, where, and when. It answers questions like where is this happening, what are the circumstances, and what is the history or relationship between characters. Context provides the framework in which the story unfolds.

  • Subtext is what is not said, the emotions, tensions, and motivations lying beneath dialogue or action. It is the story's unspoken heart, often communicated through subtle cues like a glance, a posture, or a pause.

As the Action-Cut-Print article on Text, Subtext, and Context explains, subtext and context are inseparable from good storytelling because they "allow an audience to read between the lines and experience something that feels authentic and layered."

Why Subtext and Context Are Critical in Storyboards

Scripts and written directions rarely cover every nuance. They provide the dialogue and plot but not the emotional texture or unstated motivations that make scenes resonate. A storyboard is the first visual step to flesh out those intangible elements.

For example:

  • A scene might show a couple sitting together, but is there warmth or tension?

  • Is a character looking out a window hopeful, or anxious about what is to come?

  • Does the lighting suggest daybreak or twilight, a fresh start or an ending?

These questions shape how the frame is composed, how characters are posed, and what the camera focuses on. That is the language of subtext and context at work.

Choosing the Right Storyboard Artist

Given the complexity of subtext and context, it is essential to work with a storyboard artist who does not just draw what is on the page but interprets what the story truly needs to say visually.

  • Someone who understands how body language, environment, and pacing influence narrative tone.

  • An artist who can translate written or verbal cues into cinematic moments that support the director’s vision.

  • A collaborator who asks questions, reads the emotional undercurrents, and reflects those through composition and gesture.

This expertise cannot be replaced by generic templates or quick AI-generated visuals. While AI can assist with initial drafts or speed, it cannot reliably understand or apply the nuanced emotional logic that a seasoned artist brings.

The Role of Subtext in Camera Planning and Visual Storytelling

Subtext and context also guide key technical choices. Here are just a few examples:

  • Shot Selection:
    Close-ups reveal subtle emotions and invite intimacy. Wide shots emphasize isolation or environment. Medium shots balance character and setting, showing relationships.

  • Camera Movement:
    Slow push-ins heighten tension or emotional intensity. Quick cuts suggest urgency or surprise. Tracking shots follow characters and reveal information dynamically.

  • Lighting and Color:

    Harsh shadows can imply danger or mystery. Warm tones suggest safety or nostalgia, while cooler palettes convey detachment or melancholy.

  • Recurring Visual Motifs:
    Repeated imagery like doors can symbolize transition or entrapment and link moments together. Directional choices, such as a villain always entering from the same side, cue audiences subtly about narrative roles.

  • Composition and Framing:
    Off-center framing suggests imbalance. Tight framing creates tension, while open space highlights freedom or loneliness.

A storyboard artist fluent in these storytelling tools helps directors and cinematographers visualize the emotional beats before filming starts, saving time, money, and creative friction on set.

Final Thoughts

Every effective story has layers that must be uncovered, visualized, and communicated. The best storyboard artists bring these layers to the surface through their understanding of context and subtext. Not just by drawing scenes but by telling the story’s feel through composition, gesture, and pacing.

If you want visuals that go beyond literal depiction and truly connect with audiences, choosing an artist who understands this depth is key.

If you want to explore how storyboards can bring your script’s hidden layers to life, let’s connect.

📩 Reach out: paul@paultemplestudios.com
🎨 Explore more: www.paultemplestudios.com

Want more blog posts on this topic?
1. Breathing Life Into Your Characters: The Importance of Good Character Design
2.
Setting the Emotional Tempo: How Storyboards Shape the Audience’s Experience
3.
From Traditional Painting to Preproduction: How Fine Art Roots Shape Visual Storytelling

In Advertising, Film, Storyboards Tags Storytelling, Subtext, Context, Camera Planning, Storyboards, Storyboard Artist, Shooting boards, Preproduction
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Pepsi Zero Sugar storyboards featuring Steve Martin - Super Bowl LVII commercial. Art by Paul Temple.

The Art of the Pitch Starts with the Right Visuals

Paul Temple July 24, 2025

You’ve got 90 seconds to make a client say yes. Now what?

A pitch is more than just a script and some clever copy. It’s your shot to make the client see the vision…clearly, emotionally, and fast. And there’s no tool more effective (or more overlooked) than storyboards.

As a storyboard artist with over a decade of experience in commercial advertising and film, I’ve worked with agencies on campaigns for Amazon, Google, Pepsi, and dozens more. One thing is always true: nothing clicks a client’s confidence into place faster than seeing a clear, compelling storyboard.

In this post, I’ll show you why storyboards are essential, not just for winning pitches, but for aligning teams, selling ideas, and keeping productions on track. Whether you’re a creative director, agency producer, or filmmaker, storyboards are one of the smartest investments you can make.

1. Clients Buy What They Can See

Words and decks are abstract. Most clients aren’t trained to visualize what a 30-second spot will look or feel like from reading a script. That’s where storyboards come in. They close the imagination gap.

When a client sees the visual sequence (the timing, composition, movement, and emotion), they stop guessing and start believing. They see how the concept unfolds. They understand where the camera will be, what the mood is, how talent will move through space. That visual clarity builds trust, and that trust leads to green lights.

If you’re selling a high-concept idea or a complex visual effect, storyboards help reduce perceived risk. Clients want to know what they’re buying before they buy it. Storyboards make the invisible visible, and that makes them one of your most persuasive sales tools.

2. Storyboards Sell the Mood, Not Just the Action

A strong storyboard doesn’t just check off camera angles. It sells tone.

When I create boards, I think like a cinematographer. My drawings aren’t just functional, they’re atmospheric. I want the client to feel what the spot will feel like. That might mean backlighting a silhouette for drama, sketching loose energetic gestures to convey movement, or using shadow and contrast to build tension.

Different brands call for different moods… clean minimalism, kinetic chaos, sun-drenched warmth. The goal is to give the client an emotional preview of what’s coming.

Some of the most effective pitches I’ve worked on didn’t just explain the idea. They transported the client into the world of the ad. That’s what mood-driven storyboards can do!

3. The Director and Line Producer Will Thank You

It’s not just clients who benefit from storyboards. Your entire production team gains a roadmap.

Directors use storyboards to plan transitions, block scenes, hire actors and scout setups. Producers use them to estimate shoot days, special equipment needs, and postproduction workflows.

I’ve collaborated with directors, DPs, and VFX supervisors to shape sequences that feel cinematic while staying realistic to shoot. That’s the difference between a pretty drawing and a shooting board… it’s functional art.

When the visuals are locked down early, your team can move with confidence. That kind of efficiency saves time, money, and stress.

4. Clear Storyboards Prevent Costly Confusion

A chaotic shoot often starts with unclear creative. But when everyone (the agency, the client, the crew) is working from the same visual plan, the whole process tightens up.

Storyboards:

  • Align expectations

  • Identify technical challenges early

  • Minimize miscommunication

  • Speed up decision-making

I’ve seen entire production days saved because someone flagged an issue during a storyboard review before equipment was rented or a shot list was finalized. That’s the kind of foresight that earns trust with clients and line producers alike.

5. Human-Drawn Boards Create Confidence (and Connection)

In a time when AI-generated visuals are flooding the creative space, hand-drawn boards still hit differently. They feel intentional. Custom. Human.

I sketch fast, but with purpose. My background in traditional painting, influenced by artists like Sargent, Sorolla, and Munnings, shows up in every frame: in the gesture, the light, the storytelling choices.

There’s something reassuring about boards that feel alive. Clients notice the difference. So do creative directors.

AI can spit out approximations. But it can’t read a room, adjust based on feedback mid-call, or bring 12 + years of production instinct to the table. That’s what I do… and that’s why human illustrators aren’t going anywhere.

Real-Life Example: Storyboards That Saved the Spot

A few years ago, I worked with a global agency on a high-stakes automotive campaign. The spot featured a complex VFX sequence involving a car reveal, dramatic lighting transitions, and multiple camera moves, all compressed into 30 seconds.

The initial pitch was stalling. The client liked the concept but couldn’t “see” it. Once I boarded out the entire spot (beat by beat, with camera notes and motion cues) the pitch turned around.

The client signed off within days. The production went off without a hitch. And the creative team credited the storyboards as the turning point that sold the idea.That’s the power of visual storytelling when it’s done right.

What to Expect When Working With Me

If you’re looking for a storyboard artist who understands how advertising works, who knows how to move quickly, interpret direction, and think like a filmmaker… I’m your guy. Here’s what working with me looks like:

  • Quick turnarounds for pitches, moodboards, and client presentations

  • Flexible revisions as creative evolves

  • Shooting boards built with directors and DPs in mind

  • A range of styles, from rough linework to full-color frames

  • Real-time feedback sessions with your creative team

Whether you’re shaping a pitch or mapping out production, I’ll help you visualize the story before the first frame is ever shot.

Let’s Make Your Vision Visible

In a pitch meeting, every second counts. Storyboards help you hit the ground running. Fast, visual, and emotionally clear.

If you're an agency producer, art director, or director prepping your next campaign, and you want a collaborator who speaks both creative and production fluently, let’s talk!

📩 Reach out: paul@paultemplestudios.com
🎨 Explore more: www.paultemplestudios.com

Want more blog posts on this topic?
1. Commercials Are Short Films: Why Storyboards Matter Even More in 30 Seconds
2.
From Pitch to Production: Winning Clients with Storyboards
3.
Why Animatics Aren't Just for Animation

In Advertising, Storyboards Tags storyboards, storyboard artist, ad pitch tips, creative pitch, shooting boards, advertising, visual storytelling, concept art
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Jan 7, 2026
Composition and Control: The Cinematic Science Behind a Great Frame
Nov 3, 2025
Composition and Control: The Cinematic Science Behind a Great Frame
Nov 3, 2025
Nov 3, 2025
Concept Art and Storyboards for Indie Film Crowdfunding
Sep 18, 2025
Concept Art and Storyboards for Indie Film Crowdfunding
Sep 18, 2025
Sep 18, 2025
Breathing Life Into Your Characters: The Importance of Good Character Design
Aug 21, 2025
Breathing Life Into Your Characters: The Importance of Good Character Design
Aug 21, 2025
Aug 21, 2025
 

Latest Blog Posts

Featured
Patterns in Nature: Lessons for Cinematic Composition
Mar 16, 2026
Patterns in Nature: Lessons for Cinematic Composition
Mar 16, 2026
Mar 16, 2026
Breaking Creative Ruts: Metaphor and Non-Linear Thinking in Visual Development
Mar 9, 2026
Breaking Creative Ruts: Metaphor and Non-Linear Thinking in Visual Development
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
Camera Movement in Static Boards: Conveying Motion and Energy Without Animation
Mar 2, 2026
Camera Movement in Static Boards: Conveying Motion and Energy Without Animation
Mar 2, 2026
Mar 2, 2026
Gesture Drawing: The Action Behind the Emotion
Feb 23, 2026
Gesture Drawing: The Action Behind the Emotion
Feb 23, 2026
Feb 23, 2026
Wisdom In The Work: Bezalel And The Tabernacle
Feb 16, 2026
Wisdom In The Work: Bezalel And The Tabernacle
Feb 16, 2026
Feb 16, 2026
The Value of a Story Partner in Visual Storytelling
Jan 20, 2026
The Value of a Story Partner in Visual Storytelling
Jan 20, 2026
Jan 20, 2026
When Iteration Becomes Overthinking and Hurts Your Story
Jan 12, 2026
When Iteration Becomes Overthinking and Hurts Your Story
Jan 12, 2026
Jan 12, 2026
Hiring a Storyboard and VisDev Artist: A Step by Step Guide
Jan 7, 2026
Hiring a Storyboard and VisDev Artist: A Step by Step Guide
Jan 7, 2026
Jan 7, 2026
Color Theory, Craft, and the Human Eye
Jan 6, 2026
Color Theory, Craft, and the Human Eye
Jan 6, 2026
Jan 6, 2026
The Silhouette Test: Why Character Design Starts with Simple Shapes
Dec 8, 2025
The Silhouette Test: Why Character Design Starts with Simple Shapes
Dec 8, 2025
Dec 8, 2025

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