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Storyboard

From shot list to storyboard grid — one step.

Scenehalo takes your shot list and lays it out as a panel grid — each frame with a shot-type label, a plain-language description, and timing. No sketching, no design tool required.

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What it is

A storyboard gets everyone on the same page before you press record

Shot lists are for the person filming. Storyboards are for the client, the collaborator, and the director who won't be on set. Scenehalo gives you both — generated from the same concept input.

Panel grid layout

Panel count matches your shot list. Each panel represents a distinct frame moment — labeled by shot type and described in plain language that a camera operator or client can read without a production background.

Shot-type annotations

Every panel carries its shot type — HOOK / WIDE / MCU / B-ROLL / CLOSE — so the grid is scannable at a glance.

Client-ready export

Export to PDF for production bibles. Push to Google Slides for client review. Each panel outputs as its own slide with shot label, description, and timing annotation — nothing to lay out manually.

When to use storyboard vs shot list

The right tool for the right collaboration context

Use storyboard when…

  • You're presenting to a client or creative director
  • You're working with a collaborator who isn't on set
  • You're pitching a content series concept
  • You need visual alignment before a production day

Use shot list when…

  • You're filming solo and need an on-set checklist
  • You're batching 10+ scripts in a session
  • Your editor needs the shot sequence reference
  • You're planning timing and pacing in advance

Read: Storyboard vs Shot List — Which Do You Actually Need?

Input a concept. Export a client-ready storyboard.

No card. No design skills needed. Runs from the same workflow as your shot list.

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