Moodboarding

Method

A visual research method for gathering references that express the mood, tone, or direction of a project.

Description

Moodboarding helps a team agree on the feel of a project before details are fixed. A moodboard may show atmosphere, color, texture, genre, emotional tone, or spatial direction. In immersive work, it can also point toward how a room, world, interface, or participant role should feel.

Typical Use

Used early in a project, during art direction, pitch work, worldbuilding, exhibition design, or team alignment.

Scope Note

This method may include image boards, color references, material examples, lighting references, spatial references, and short notes about why each reference matters.

Boundary Note

A moodboard is strongest when it explains what the references mean for the project, instead of simply collecting attractive images.

Collaboration Note

Usually involves directors, designers, art directors, writers, researchers, producers, concept artists, sound designers, and key stakeholders.

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