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14 Tips for Good Kindle Cover Design | Humble Nations. I have been a professional graphic designer for more years than I can now remember and have designed more things than I care to name (but will): T-shirts, CD covers, packaging, Ebay listings, websites, flyers, posters, letterheads, signage … the list goes on. But strangely enough, until I decided to put some of my own stories on Amazon through KDP, no book covers. Through my lurking on the KDP Forums, and checking out the competition in the last 4 month, I’ve seen hundreds of terrible, hideous, trashy, horrid, nasty, vomit-inducing book covers that break every rule of good design. Boy these people must really love losing potential readers, I thought to myself at first. But then more kindly, thought: well they probably don’t know about design. So rather than being a Mr-Know-It-All, I figure it’s about time I sat down and put some of my thoughts down to help out my fellow writers. My tips are by no means exhaustive and like any art form, design can be a rather subjective subject.

iStock. Go On Write. The Pre-made Kindle / eBook Book Cover Depository. 14 Tips for Good Kindle Cover Design | Humble Nations. Most Popular Fonts. 5 Great Fonts for Book Covers. One of the most consistent and easily corrected mistakes I see with book covers that are designed by authors is weak or inappropriate typography. Given that a book cover usually has very few words on it, and those words (title, subtitle, author’s name) have a huge influence on buying decisions, this can be a major problem. For instance, if you’re writing about a topic considered masculine and aimed at a male audience, does it help you to have an overly-embellished or feminine typeface that’s barely readable on your book cover?

No, I don’t think so either. Or for a historical romance, you wouldn’t want a modern clean sans serif typeface like Helvetica for your cover. It would simply look dangerously out of place. How Inappropriate Typefaces Happen The reasons some authors end up with this kind of typography on their book covers include: This last reason is probably the most common. Display fonts are different from text fonts. 5 Great Fonts for Your Book Cover 2. 3. 4. 5. Be Sociable, Share! 10 great uses of typography on book covers | Typography. Fantastic typography can encourage readers to reach for a book - here are 10 top pieces of book cover design that use type to tantalise. They say you should never judge a book by its cover but some are inspiring not just for the words inside. Amazing uses of typography on a cover can encourage readers to reach for the shelves and get nose deep in a book.

We have already looked at why real book covers still resonate - read Jeremy Garner's views here. Now we've picked some examples of superb book cover designs using typography that kick the Kindle to the curb. Check out our selection of creative fonts - and they don't cost a penny 01. Cormac McCarthy, No Country for Old Men Designer David Pearson has designed the covers for nearly all of Cormac McCarthy's novels, including the infamous titles No Country for Old Men and The Road. 02. Originally published in 1969, American graphic designer S Neil Fujita created a heavy, Gothic-looking typeface for The Godfather. 03. 04. 05. 06. 07. 08. 09. 10. Freedom, adventure and impact for indie authors and artists. Indie publishers are slowly coming to realize the importance of an amazing book cover. Since many self-publishing authors are starting out on a very small budget however, homemade, DIY book covers are still a popular choice.

But be forewarned: although book cover designs come in a wide variety, publishers consistently use reliable, time-tested techniques and guidelines to catch your attention and make the sale. You want your cover to be different and unique, but you also want to tick all the right boxes (because they work). The worst thing an author can do is consider their cover design like a blank canvas and add whatever they want, wherever they want. So here are the tricks you need to know. 1. A lot of authors ask for covers that “pop.” You want the central object or character to really “pop” out, by being spotlighted and lighter in color (you can also do the reverse and have a very light cover, with a bold, dark central image). 2.

A lot of book covers are too busy. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.