All Use Cases

Authors & Storytellers

Stop Telling Publishers What Your World Looks Like. Show Them.

Your manuscript has scenes that would stop anyone in their tracks — if they could see them. Turn your written scenes into illustrated panels. For publisher pitches, Kickstarter campaigns, or just to finally see your world on screen.

The problem

You've built an entire world. Nobody can see it yet.

You know exactly what your protagonist looks like. You can picture the city they walk through, the way the light falls in that first scene, the expression on their face when everything changes. You've lived in this world for years.

But when you pitch it, you describe it. And description only goes so far. Agents read hundreds of manuscripts. Publishers see thousands of queries. Your words have to do everything — convey the character, the world, the tone — while every other submission does the same thing with words.

The authors who stand out bring something more. A visual. A chapter preview. A reason to stop and look twice. Illustrators charge $50–200 a page and take weeks. So most authors never have that option.

"

I know exactly what my characters look like. I just can't show anyone.

"

Publishers want to see the vision — reading about it isn't the same.

"

Hiring an illustrator for a pitch costs more than my advance.

"

I want a graphic preview chapter but I can't draw a stick figure.

The solution

Your manuscript, illustrated. Your characters, consistent.

YarnSaga lets you take any scene from your book and turn it into an illustrated panel. Describe your character once — their look, their style, their world — and they appear the same way in every panel you create. No briefing an illustrator. No waiting weeks. No $200 per page.

Pick the art style that matches your genre. Dark fantasy gets noir or gothic. YA adventure gets manga or animation. Literary fiction gets bande dessinée. Build a visual preview chapter that shows agents and publishers exactly what your world looks and feels like.

What you get

Everything you need. Nothing you don't.

01Visualize any scene from your manuscript
Take the opening chapter, the inciting incident, the scene you've rewritten twelve times because it matters so much. Describe it to YarnSaga. Get it illustrated in seconds. See your story the way you've always pictured it.
02Your characters, consistent across every panel
Define your protagonist once and they look the same in every panel you create. Same face, same build, same costume, same presence. Your supporting cast too. The consistency that takes an illustrator weeks of back-and-forth — YarnSaga does automatically.
03A pitch deck that gets remembered
Turn your strongest scenes into a graphic preview chapter. Bring it to agent meetings. Attach it to query letters. Launch it as a Kickstarter teaser. Every other manuscript in that pile is text. Yours has visuals.
04The art style that fits your genre
YarnSaga has 11+ styles — noir, gothic horror, manga, bande dessinée, superhero, retro, watercolor, and more. Match the visual language to your story's tone and your readers' expectations. Your world deserves the right aesthetic.

How it works

From idea to published in four steps.

01

Build your characters

Describe your protagonist and key cast — or upload reference images. Get full character sheets in your chosen art style.

02

Pick your key scenes

Choose the moments that define your story — the scenes that would make anyone want to keep reading.

03

Describe and generate

Write each scene in plain English. YarnSaga illustrates it in seconds.

04

Build your visual pitch

Arrange panels into pages, add dialogue, and publish a graphic preview chapter you can share anywhere.

"I brought a 3-panel visual preview of my first chapter to a pitch meeting. The agent said it was the most memorable submission she'd seen in over a year. We signed two weeks later."

J
Jordan R.
Fantasy novelist

Your story deserves to be seen, not just read.

First scene is free. See your world illustrated in seconds.

No credit card. No drawing skills. No promises you can't keep.