Now my image shows in the Inspector, and on the index card on the cork board. (It’s a little ominous.) Just like it says, you can drag and drop an image onto this black space. The ruled lines are replaced by a big black nothingness. Click on this to change your selection from index card to image. In the top-right is a mini index card and two arrows, pointing up and down. At the top of the Inspector is the Index Card. Open in Inspector (The “i” button in the top bar, usually on the far-right). So, how do you add these awesome images? Easypeasy. I bounce between a Mac at work and Windows at home, so I make sure to screenshot layouts like this. Windows will force your cards into a grid, which has its benefits. It should be noted that this freeform layout is part of the Mac version only. I may draw lines on it later to map out relationships. Each image represents a text file with character details (Name, Age, Height, Ethnicity, Occupation) and biography relevant to the book. For the freeform layout, I dragged characters into positions relative to my main characters, who are in the top-left. Now that looks meaningful! This is my little character bible for GISELLE. When you pull back and look at all those cards a ton of text isn’t terribly helpful. This is, as you might suspect, super useful.īut, those index cards don’t have to be all text. These cards can then be displayed en mass and drag-and-dropped to reorder them. Each text file has an accompanying information card, where you can put things like a description of what the file contains. I think most people are aware by now that it has a cork board/index card function.
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