

This is my new project so I don’t have much here yet, but eventually I’ll write a synopsis of each scene on those little index cards so I can see the whole chapter or even the whole novel at a glance. You can set it for more or less opacity in the background, and I love that I can set it to show the font bigger so it’s easier to read (you can go from 50% to 800% of actual size in this mode). In this mode, which you can get into and out of by toggling Cmd-Opt-F (or by using the menu), all you see on your screen is what you’re working on. I added the Summary section at the top during the planning phase of this new project.Ĭomposition mode. Research is a catch-all for stuff you found online, notes you took, ideas, whatever. The character and places sections are templates where you fill in basic or detailed information, whatever you need, to keep track. The Manuscript section is the part that by default will be included in my final draft when I compile it, send it to pdf, or whatever. You can put stuff in folders or not, whatever you like. Each of the things you see in the list is an actual document you can click inside and edit, and you can drag items around right in the binder to reorganize your draft. This is an outline view of your whole project. Some of the things I love about Scrivener: Scapple has a quick-start guide and I haven’t yet felt the need for anything else, and I’ve done some pretty cool stuff with it. There’s a Scrivener Users group on Facebook and the people in that group are tremendously helpful if you run into a problem or have a question.

I like Jason Hough’s Scrivener Bootcamp videos. When you start feeling you want to get more out of it, there are some excellent YouTube videos. Scrivener has a built-in tutorial you can walk through in an hour or so, which is all I did for the first couple of years I was using it.
#YOUTUBE USING SCAPPLE HOW TO#
Of course the true cost of software isn’t always the money, but the time you spend learning how to use it.
#YOUTUBE USING SCAPPLE FOR FREE#
They aren’t too expensive as software goes, and if you participate in NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) or Camp NaNo, you can try Scrivener for free during the events and then if you win you can get a 50% off discount.
#YOUTUBE USING SCAPPLE WINDOWS#
They come from the company Literature and Latte and were originally produced for the Mac, although you can also get Scrivener in a Windows version and just recently an iOS version for iPads and iPhones. You can use it for mind mapping, or anything where you want to put things anywhere on the screen. Scapple is sort of like an electronic whiteboard.The creators call it a content-generation tool. to keep track of, and a lot of possibilities for organizing and structuring your work. Does that sound like an oxymoron? It’s for people who are writing novels, research papers, scripts – anything where you have a lot of information, characters, etc. Scrivener is a word processor designed for writers.I love these two pieces of software for writers.
