Cover Design Don’ts

Cathi Stevenson
January, 2007

One thing all publishers have in common, whether they’re the publishing giants seen weekly on the best sellers’ lists, smaller independent presses or self-publishing authors is the necessity of good design

Cover Design Don’ts

 

by Cathi Stevenson

 

Did you know it costs just as much money to create a bad cover as a good one? Or that you can make a great cover mediocre with a few small changes? Even an award-winning image can fall flat if it’s paired with a poor font choice, or manipulated in a way that distracts from the overall impression the cover was intended to convey.

 

Many things can contribute to a poor cover design, but most of them stem from simple lack of knowledge. The most common mistake may be using an image that doesn’t properly demonstrate what the book is about. Remember, your book is selling the solution, not the problem. If you’re publishing a diet book, you’re selling fitness and slimness, so do not put an obese person on the cover. If your book is about raising a happy baby, do not display a picture of a crying toddler.

 

If there’s no way to illustrate your solution, then use a text-only cover or one with an abstract background that provides graphic detail but without any feature photo or illustration. Plenty of bestsellers have no images on them. And fight the urge to illustrate a word in the title improperly. If your book is called A Blueprint for Happiness, do not put the blueprints for a house on the cover. Your book is not about building houses.

 

Another mistake is what I call image desperation. Either no suitable images are available, or a publisher whose budget is too small to pay for an image decides to make do with free artwork. It’s never okay to put a typewriter on a guide for modern writers. Likewise, don’t use a photo of tattered old leather-bound books on a manual for publishers (except, perhaps, if it has a significant amount of material on using antiquarian books or library resources for research).

 

Then there’s the cliché. Puzzle pieces, chess pieces, and light bulbs have pretty much been done to death. Unless you’re confident that you’ve thought of a completely fresh way to handle these common images, don’t go there. The paper in the typewriter, the close-up of the keyboard, the giant calligrapher’s pen—they’ve all had their day too. Let them rest in peace. One of the worst examples of the cliché mistake that I’ve seen was on a business strategy book. Its cover featured a photo of a chess piece—the pawn.

 

But it’s not just images and fonts that are important. It’s the details and way they are handled that give a cover that polished, professional look.

 

Problem areas frequently include font selections and kerning (the space between letters). Inexperienced designers often leave too much space between letters, or make spacing uneven. As a general rule, tamper with default kerning only if type is 18 points or bigger, and make sure you or your designer uses the proper software, such as Illustrator, InDesign, Quark. or PageMaker, for laying out the full spread. PhotoShop should be reserved for image manipulation or creating the title and front cover. It is not designed to lay out small text blocks.

 

As for fonts, it’s rarely a good idea to mix one typeface with another of the same style (script, sans serif, serif). If you want to use a script font for the title, then find a serif or sans-serif font that goes well with it, instead of using another script font. And avoid inappropriate and trendy fonts. Comic Sans has no business on a book cover, and Papyrus, while it is popular, is now being overused.

 

Look at top sellers in your favorite bookstore. How many fonts do you see on each cover? Rarely more than two. You will not often see small red lettering on black; it’s difficult to read in color and impossible to read when reproduced in black and white. Red also doesn’t print well on many shades of blue and vice versa, and it’s very hard to stare at for more than a few seconds.

 

To see examples of poor color combinations, visit tlt.its.psu.edu/suggestions/accessibility/color.html and scroll about three quarters of the way down to “Vibrating Color Combinations.”

 

Cover design does not have to be expensive. Sometimes simply being creative with the title is enough. Look at the cover of Richard Florida’s Rise of the Creative Class. The title is bumped up so it appears to be rising—effective and very inexpensive. On the cover of Bill Buford’s Heat, the eye-catching letters appear to be melting on a solid yellow-gold background.

 

Sharman Apt Russell’s Hunger: An Unnatural History is a great example of a well-chosen photograph; a wonderful picture of a well-worn fork and spoon piques interest in the contents. And to see an overused image idea with an innovative angle, check out the paperback edition of The Archivist by Martha Cooley. The stack of books is just great.

 

Cathi Stevenson is a book-cover designer and a journalist. She has designed more than 700 book covers and published more than 2,000 articles, many about publishing. More information about her and her work is available at www.bookcoverexpress.com.


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