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Your thoughts on series book covers - please? :)
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Check them out here:
http://www.sparkinspirepublishing.com...

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Really like your covers Dylan - they almost look like 'westerns' more than sci-fi - the colours really work well.

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What you could try to do is either make a graphic of an iris/pupil if that is the central theme of your book or take photos of a model's eye. You could even do various stages of an eye opening or emoting. All you would need is proper lighting (it is best to take photos on a gray day because it reduces how much color interference that darn sun offers up) and a willing subject with really nice skin and eyelashes willing to lay down while you climb on top of him or her and snap photos. You will, of course, need to ensure that the camera is properly focused so that your images look right.
Then, just plug that thing into photoshop or Gimp (the freeware version of photoshop that does most of the same stuff) and tweak as necessary to make it cover-ready.
That, or you could hire an artist to do it for you, whatever your preference is. Much luck to you! :)

What I did was create a template in GIMP with one layer for the background, a new layer for each text field, and layers between for images. For each cover in the series, I just altered the text, bucketfilled the background a slightly different color, and inserted a partially-transparent image between the text and the background.
I'm not much of a designer, but I feel they came out fairly well, though I may enlist some professional help before the first book is released.


For my Midwife's Secret series of three books within the larger set of the Queen of Scots Suite, I used photos of the same model, with the same color scheme, similar although not identical fonts, etc. They are easily identified as a set.

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M.R. wrote: "I don't think it's necessary that you use the same types of images for a series. Other design elements can be brought together for continuity: font, text size, text placement, colors, "mood"...
Wha..."



Maybe the covers are not very exciting. I'd welcome comments.



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They look really great. Are the colors linked to themes in the book?

Maybe the cov..."
You might consider tying the trilogy aspect together via typeface, title placement, something like that.

Each book's cover is a different color: The Hunger Games - black; Catching Fire - red; Mockingjay - blue.
The graphic design of the spine for each cover is exactly the same except for the color; however, each front cover design depicts the trilogy's fictional mockingjay bird in different stages of flight against a unique circular background design for each bird that provides a subtle hint of that particular installment's storyline.
I do not know if it was intentional or not; but the title of the first book contains three words, the second, two words, and the final title, just one word.




or these for the War of the Blades:



Other marketing-oriented covers include Janet Evanavich's caper books, which are similar in tone re: color, title, and graphic. Carl Haisson (spelling?) has the same font, word placement, and similarly toned color and graphics as well.
When I was a kid, I'd go to EJ Korvettes in The Bronx and search the book aisle for two beloved logos, Doc Savage and The Shadow. Whenever I saw a new one of those Ballantine books pulp reprints, I would be ridiculously thrilled. Yeah, covers make a difference, even when we are young.

Hello there, My name is Robert A. Hunt and I have two series on the go and both series are very different.
The Crater Mountain Sasquatch
The Cross-Breed Legend
These books listed above all taken place in small towns and all have some mysterious legend.
My other series are science fiction based and starts out with aliens living this planet and then continues with more aliens adventures living on other planets.
Earth Volk
Grizz: Rise of the Blackguard
Verticus
I have written another book called:
Jasper and the Shelter of Angels which is currently not a book series.

Jason Chapman



Jason Chapman"
Jason, take a look at this link
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

I'm working on a series of books at the moment and am at the turning point in relation to cover art - do you mainta..."
I think it is a good idea to maintain continuity. I took my original cover and added the new titles to a blank space at the top.



If you hire someone to do your first cover, but make up the second and third with similar fonts and a similar stock image, is that violating the original cover designer's copyright?
I think it is, because I think it's a derivative, but then at the same time, I'm not sure because how different would it have to be?
Can you no longer use a similar image or say, handwritten font? Any help?
Books mentioned in this topic
Highland's Blood: A Vampyres Journey (other topics)Grizz: Rise of the Blackguard (other topics)
The Crossbreed Legend (other topics)
Verticus (other topics)
Earth Volk (other topics)
More...
I'm working on a series of books at the moment and am at the turning point in relation to cover art - do you maintain the theme throughout the series for continuity? Or do people like to see things change with the storylines (as the setting changes between the first two books and the second two).
My current book covers:
Are a 'matching pair' - as a reader, would you like to see the theme continued or see wholly different cover styles for the next 'pair' of books in the series?
I'm thinking of the standard range used through things like Twilight series, Harry Potter, etc. where the main conventions (such as fonts, background colours, etc.) were used throughout the whole set.
What do you think?