I've been interested in
graphics ever since I first got a PC. That was back when MSN still
had their groups and I joined one that taught Paintshop Pro and also
HTML. Yeah, I'm old.
I stumbled into
professional cover design by the simple process of making mock covers
for my own work – being able to see the “finished” product was
a huge incentive for me. When I signed ELEANOR'S HEART over to
Champagne Books, I had one such cover and enquired as to whether I
could use it. Not only did boss Ellen Smith say 'yes', but she asked it I
wanted to create more covers.
It seems that a lot of
self-published authors don't think about covers, which strikes me as
odd. What is the first anyone is going to see about your book? Cover.
What's the best way of advertising it? Cover. And yet some people
scrimp on this vital part.
Creating a decent cover
requires a graphics program which lets you manipulate pictures, a
vision of what you want, and an understanding of typography. The
cover has to capture a snapshot of the book – indicating genre and
theme. So a sci fi romance ought to have something spacey (technical
description) and a couple. Avoid clichés and cluttering, and keep it
simple.
Remember that most
purchase sites will reduce your cover to a thumbnail – check how it
looks as a reduced size and ensure it's still legible.
It you're buying stock
images there are two important things to remember. First, check the
license and ensure it's one that covers everything you want – don't
forget that you're not only going to be using it for the cover, but
for all the promotional material. Secondly, the minimum resolution
you want is 300px, even if you're just publishing electronically.
Again, when it comes to physical promotion – such as bookmarks –
you want quality to avoid “fuzzing”.
Lastly, if you can't do
it yourself, then there are artists who don't charge an absolute
fortune. Shameless self-promotion – I'm one of them. I've done
covers, Twitter and Facebook headers, and blog banners. My rates are
on my website and I have a portfolio of previous work.
Good info - thanks for this. I am, unfortunately, one of those who has no talent for this so am glad there are those of you out there who do. I can edit with the best of them, but cover art? Not happening. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for your insights, Misa. This is definitely a topic I want to know more about. Having at least some skill with graphic design can come in very handy for a writer!
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