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scientiarum · 4 years
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How to Outline, Brainstorm, and Research Your Novel with Scrivener
A few days ago, I made a post outlining all of the basic reasons to love Scrivener, especially heading into NaNoWriMo. Today I thought I’d follow up on that post by highlighting a few ways to use Scrivener’s unique features to plan your novel. (I’ll follow this up later with short guides about drafting and revising in Scrivener.) 
Outlining 
In the binder of on the left-hand side of the screen, you’ll see a folder for your manuscript. On the right-hand side of the top toolbar, you’ll see a corkboard icon. Selecting both of these options will take you to the screen in he first image. 
Here you can start outlining your novel. By clicking the green square on the top toolbar, you can add new texts to your manuscript. Once you add a text, an index card will appear you can give it a working title and short synopsis. 
You don’t have to outline every chapter in order. Or even every chapter. Once you have an idea for a scene, create a card for it, write a summary, and drag it and drop it to its approximate location in your story. 
Throw every scene idea you have into your outline and delete them as you narrow down your plot to a single arc. 
If you have ideas for dialog or descriptions, you can type them up in the notes section in the Inspector on the right-hand side of your screen. 
You can also outline in the screen in the second image by clicking the icon to the right of the corkboard icon on your toolbar. 
When you’re ready to start writing, simply click on the text in the binder and begin. Your summary and notes will be in the inspector on the right-hand side of your drafting screen, ready for you to implement. 
Brainstorming 
Characters 
Characters have their own folder in the binder, as well as their own corkboard. (Accessed just like the manuscript corkboard is accessed.) As you come up with characters for your novel, you can create index cards with their names/roles and a few notes. 
The text files these index cards will create a little character questionnaire form for you to fill out, which you can see an example of in the fourth image. The best thing about these questionnaires is that you can change the items in them by editing the template in the template folder in your binder, to reflect your own character-building methods. (If you know anything about this blog, you’ll probably know how much I dislike being given someone else’s character questionnaire.) 
You can also add images of your characters to their sketches. Simply drag and drop the image file into the box that acts as the ‘summary’ box on manuscript text index cards. 
This is a handy location for keeping all of your character brainstorming, where you can easily reference it while drafting. 
Locations 
Locations have a folder that functions exactly the same as the character folder, with a different template for location sketches. You can store information about cities, streets, buildings, etc. here. If you have trouble recalling layouts, designs, and descriptions, store that information in the location folder and it will always be a click away. 
Other
If there are other elements of your novel you’d like to keep track of (Magic spells/magic system? Fantasy creatures? Murder methods? Featured artworks?) you can do so easily. Create a new folder in your binder. In the template folder, add a new text and devise your template. When you want to add a new template text to your folder, click and hold the arrow next to the green ‘add’ button in your toolbar, and select your template. 
Research
The research folder is my favorite. You can drag and drop almost any kind of file into the research folder. In this example, I have an image, a song, a pdf, and a webpage.
Yes. You can save webpages to your research, and they’ll appear almost exactly as they do on a web browser. (To do this, save a webpage as an .html file to your desktop, drag it into your research folder, delete it from your desktop, and you can check it out whether you’re connected to wifi or not.) 
The music will play in the Scrivener window itself, as will any videos you add. Pdfs and word files can be read in Scrivener as well. 
Honestly, I don’t know of any file types that you can’t simply throw into Scrivener. 
You can create folders for characters/topics/chapters and organize your research, or you can just throw it all on the corkboard. 
As you research topics for your manuscript, you can throw literally everything into your research folder. It can act as a mood board with images or it can store a tome’s worth of .pdfs about topics in your manuscript. Or it can do both. 
You don’t need to open a bunch of programs to view webpages, images, and pdfs to view your research. 
You don’t need to search for your brainstorming in a bunch of different notebooks and paper scraps or word files. (Although you can totally brainstorm in a notebook while away from your computer, and type up the ideas you like in Scriv later.) 
You don’t need to scratch out, toss, and rewrite an outline just because you want to move a few scenes around, or keep one pinned to your desk or carry one around in your backpack. 
With Scrivener, all of your brainstorming, researching, and outlining is integrated into your manuscript file, perfectly organized and easily accessible.
Scrivener has a free NaNoWriMo special edition trial that can be used from now until December 7th. Download it here. 
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scientiarum · 4 years
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06.08.20 / i’ve been so busy lately with errands it feels so good to finally return to the usual today. russian notes ft. the plant corner in my study. hope your week has been fruitful so far. hang in there ♡
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scientiarum · 4 years
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•9𝐬𝐞𝐩𝐭, 𝐰𝐞𝐝𝐧𝐞𝐬𝐝𝐚𝐲• heyy so here's the sept spread, I made this longgg ago and these pictures been sitting in my drafts for a while because I was unfortunately too tired after attending classes everyday :') now I actually understand how hard online classes are I'm so proud of everyone who is going through the same ily(〒﹏〒)
🎧: tiger inside_superm
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scientiarum · 4 years
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🗓 july 17, 2020
this is basically how my life is gonna go every day until my licensure exam on november ☕️ i actually prefer online classes rather than physical classes because i get to stay at home and study on my own 🍃
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scientiarum · 4 years
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the fact that time passes and things change and people leave and you can only go back to a place physically and you will never be 14 15 16 again………….. i don’t understand how we are meant to endure that
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scientiarum · 4 years
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scientiarum · 4 years
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September is here. Meaning that you should to start fresh. So change those bed sheets. Switch out that old toothbrush. Get your hoodies and sweaters out. Prepare for a better you. With new goals. And a healthier mindset. I know it’s been hard lately, but use this opportunity to start fresh.
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scientiarum · 4 years
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Glasgow Cathedral.
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scientiarum · 4 years
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wednesday july 1 2020
i cannot believe it’s july! one of my goals is to finish this book, hopefully i can by the end of the week. i wish nothing but success and happiness for whoever is reading this 🤍🌿
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scientiarum · 4 years
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ive trying to consciously make studying enjoyable, but also rigorous and productive lately. started by downloading forest and tidying up my desk (a very good mix of art and law obvs). today is day one. hope everyone is staying safe.
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scientiarum · 4 years
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20.06.19
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scientiarum · 4 years
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scientiarum · 4 years
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Day 22 of 100 - 09/08 - The most productive week ever!
I’m back after my short disappearance! 
Where did I go? Well, if you can make out from my past posts, I was stuck on a pendulum, swinging to the extremes of productivity and unproductivity. I drew a plan for the month of August on last Sunday and that night, I went to sleep with high hopes for the week! Monday morning came, I hit snooze and went back to sleep.
When I woke up at 10 that day and had an extremely unproductive day, I was extremely disappointed with myself. I asked myself where am I going wrong? I have done all these reflections, made plans, why do I still not find the spark in me to do the things I’ve planned?
And so on Monday night, I meditated and reflected, and in that moment it clicked. This was what was lagging. I was always rushing, anxious about the next thing on my to-do list, already worried about the future and not living in the present. And that took a toll on me. It pushed my anxiety to such extreme, that my brain preferred not to do anything at all.
So I understood, what I need isn’t any more plans or ideas, but actions. I need more actions and stop looking for the next thing. I need to be more mindful and do the task at hand with all my presence, and then when the next task comes, I’ll do it with only that task in mind.
Tuesday morning, I woke up (late) but I told myself I still have the whole and that is enough. I drew a rough plan of the day, and started trying to be more mindful of the task on hand but there was one distraction which kept making me anxious and interrupting my train of thoughts, again and again and again. It was my phone. And hence why, I decided its time for a digital detox. You are never going to believe the results of the digital detox.
I caught up with a huge portion of my online classes that I was falling behind on, completed more than required of my work at office, rediscovered my love for yoga and pilates and then, still had time to practice my Italian (I practised it for the first time in 2 weeks!). You guys, I was shocked by how much time I spent on mindlessly scrolling through Instagram, being unproductive and then tried to make new plans to try and fix it. Believe me when I say, I haven’t had a week this productive in 4 months! I have started going to bed on time, still need to work on getting up early, but I even have been sleeping better! (maybe the blue light really does affect our quality of sleep).
Over the weekend, I even found some extra time to summarise what I had learnt in my online classes during the week and started a notebook to keep track and take notes of my Italian classes and had a 30 minute Yoga class too!
So, will I continue my digital detox for this week too?  A HUNDRED PERCENT. This is the best thing that has come out of this productivity challenge so far, imagine if I had never discovered it!
Let’s hope this week will be equally productive.
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scientiarum · 4 years
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might mess around and become god
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scientiarum · 4 years
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scientiarum · 4 years
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05.26.20; 1:30pm
completed the cards I made for the nearby masonic senior home and brought them to the post office this morning!
here are a couple snaps of my notebook for khan's ap art course 🔆
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scientiarum · 4 years
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my life is imbued with uncertainty…i seek solace in books and my space✨
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