Script-to-frame planning
Convert a script, treatment, or creative brief into storyboard-ready frames and prompts faster.
Use AI to move from written ideas to draft frames for planning, review, and creative alignment before production starts.
An AI storyboard generator helps creative teams convert scripts, scene briefs, treatments, and campaign ideas into visual frames without waiting for a fully manual board. That makes it easier to explore shot order, pacing, framing, and reference direction early in the process.
This workflow is useful for agencies, filmmakers, social video teams, product marketers, and in-house creative groups that need to present ideas quickly. Reference images, frame-level retries, and editable prompts help you keep the board practical enough for review while still moving faster than a traditional storyboard pass.
A storyboard workspace helps teams review scenes earlier and refine visual direction before production.
Convert a script, treatment, or creative brief into storyboard-ready frames and prompts faster.
Show draft scenes earlier so directors, marketers, and clients can react before production decisions are locked.
Use reference images, aspect ratios, and prompt edits to keep scenes aligned across the full board.
Regenerate only the scenes that need improvement instead of rebuilding the entire storyboard.
Storyboard tools work best when teams need a fast visual draft for planning, presentation, or review.
Build draft scene sequences for campaign ideas, branded shoots, and client-facing presentations.
Map beats, transitions, and scene order for social clips, explainers, and promo content.
Visualize product reveals, feature demonstrations, and benefit-led scenes before filming or rendering.
Use frames to align internal teams on shot intent, character continuity, and overall pacing.
Build a draft board in a few steps, then refine only the scenes that need work.
Upload up to three reference images if you want to guide style, character, or product direction.
Describe the story, beats, scenes, or campaign concept you want the board to visualize.
Check generated frames, edit prompts, and regenerate individual cards until the sequence feels right.
Common questions about scripts, references, frames, and retries.
The current workspace lets you generate between 2 and 12 frames per storyboard project.
No. You can start with a short brief, a rough scene outline, or a fuller script, then refine the storyboard as the concept becomes clearer.
Yes. You can upload up to three reference images to guide style, character consistency, or product direction.
Yes. After generation, you can revise a frame prompt and retry only that frame instead of rerunning the entire board.