In a comment on
a posting about Mickey's Orphans on
Michael Sporn's ever-inspiring blog, it was asked what the size of the storyboard drawings shown is. I happen to have some pages of this paper, and scanned one. It isn't a great work of art, but it shows the sheet, a standard sheet of 9.5" x 12" animation paper with three red rectangles printed on it. The rectangles are precisely 3" by 4". Hope this answered that question...
The rough sketch of a beached Clarabelle Cow is by Burt Gillett...
Many thanks for answering the question. Have a Happy Christmas and a great New Year, Hans.
ReplyDeleteMmm, interesting; that;s how big they are??? They're a lot smaller than I imagined; Bill Peet's storyboard papers weren't big; and they look like the shape here.
ReplyDeleteI believe Webb Smith invented the storyboards; am I right?
Steven: according to legend, Webb Smith was the first one who actually pinned the sketches to a board, or on the wall. Before that they were laid out on the floor or a table, and earlier they were gathered several onto single sheets of (letter size or animation size) paper in a stack... See e.g. the boards for Plane Crazy elsewhere on this blog.
ReplyDelete