![]() ![]() Vellum doesn’t have these features, because it’s a formatting tool, NOT a story development tool. I love all the extra areas where you can place research and character or location sketches, which means everything to do with your book is kept in one document. It’s a nice visual on your overall project.Ī place for everything. One of the features in Scrivener that I love is the corkboard view – it allows you to get an overview of all your chapters, and to drag them to rearrange instantly. I think sometimes Scrivener can feel a bit MUCH, you know? But if you’re writing a full-length novel, it is THE tool that’s going to give you that place to make your mess, which you need to do before you get your house in order.Ĭorkboard View. If you use Scrivener, you’ll know how messy it can get with all the chapters, research, documents you’ve discarded that you may or may not go back to, text styles all over the place because you cut and pasted and never got round to formatting things properly. So what’s the difference? Here’s why I like Scrivener and am not ditching it: ![]() The way I see it, Scrivener and Vellum are two distinct tools, best used for their intended purpose. ![]() ![]() So am I breaking up with Scrivener in favour of Vellum? I know, I know… that’s not what it was made for, but I really love the clean feel to its interface and the instant preview you get while writing. Not only does Vellum produce beautiful outputs for every platform with a couple of clicks, it’s also really nice to write directly into. ![]()
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