Monday, September 30, 2013

A call to artists and graphic designers


I'm working hard on the third book in the Maxwell Saga, and have many more books planned or under consideration.  Until now I've used stock images for my covers, with editing and graphic design input by Oleg Volk (who's done an amazing job - check out the covers in my sidebar for examples - and who will probably continue to design my covers, using author-supplied images).  However, I'm finding it difficult to locate cover art that meets my needs for future books.  Stock images are OK at a basic level, but not much further than that.  I know that other authors and would-be authors are having the same problem - I'm in touch with at least five or six of them.

Trying to find someone to produce custom artwork for book covers is very frustrating.  All too often one provides ideas - even a rough sketch - to an 'artist', only to have them insist on interpreting that according to their vision of how it should look.  They've got it all wrong.  If I'm paying, I decide how it should be interpreted.  I want to hire someone who'll work with me to make my vision a reality.  I don't want to waste my money on someone who tries to do it their way!  If they have good, creative ideas to suggest, that's fine with me;  but in the end, it's my judgment that counts.  (Of course, that may sum up the difference between an 'artist' and a 'graphic designer'.  One is motivated by personal creativity first and foremost;  the other primarily by commercial considerations.)

Be that as it may, I've decided to try to find someone - or more than one person - who'll produce custom images for my book covers.  I've priced that sort of thing carefully.  I can hire someone like Luca Oleastri, a.k.a. 'Innovari' (whose images I used for the first two Maxwell book covers) for about $200 to produce a single custom image of the type and size required.  He works fast (turnaround time is usually 1-2 weeks for the initial image, plus a couple of days for edits and changes), and delivers a ready-to-use 300dpi JPEG or TIFF image file.  That's affordable, and a very reasonable rate compared to some other 'big-name' artists/designers.  I don't want to go higher than that, because I'm not selling huge quantities of books, and I can't afford to pay the sort of rates a large publisher would be charged.  For a 'beginner' artist, still making his or her reputation and wanting to build up a portfolio, I'd look to pay less than that per image;  but I understand they have to eat, too, so I won't be unreasonable.

I know at least one other author who's looking for a cover artist right now.  There are more - I'm in touch with at least half a dozen, and for the right person with the right attitude at the right price, I'm willing to help sell their services to everyone (because it's in all our interests to have a good artist/graphic designer available at a reasonable price).  That number of authors might produce a steady income stream for the right person, perhaps 1-2 covers every month.  I also know a small press imprint that might be interested in good artwork for their covers, if the price is right.

The covers have to meet the following criteria:

  • They must fit the genre in question (in my case, science fiction, but other authors will fall into different categories).
  • They must have a central, eye-catching image or theme that stands out and is easily recognizable in thumbnail size, and even in reduced-thumbnail size, on Amazon.com (see my covers in the sidebar for an idea of what this entails).  Call it 'visual branding' for want of a better word - a central image that catches the eye.  They must use text fonts, color, light and shading to be eye-catching and easily understandable in a row, or multiple rows, of other thumbnail cover images, so as to attract the attention of potential readers.  (Go to a few Amazon.com book pages and look at the 'Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought' recommendations - an example is shown below.  Look for images that have a clear central feature, easily identifiable despite their small size.  Look for fonts that are easy to read, even when the text is tiny.  Look for colors that jump out at you, catching the eye.  Now look at those covers where the colors are washed-out or too dark, or titles are hard to read, or images have no central feature that expresses and encapsulates their subject matter.  Makes a difference, doesn't it?)


  • The images and artwork can't be overly gaudy or flashy.  They have to be professional.  They're going to appear alongside tens of thousands of other books with professionally-produced covers, and must be able to bear comparison with them.

If you're an artist or graphic designer who can produce computerized images of the size and quality required, and interpret either detailed instructions from an author and/or the plot of a book to design suitable images, and are willing to work for the amounts I've mentioned earlier, please contact me, either by e-mail (my address is in my blog profile), or by leaving a comment beneath this post.  You should be able to provide samples of your work.

(Also, if any reader has friends or acquaintances who possess the necessary skills and experience to do this, please ask them to read this post, and suggest that they contact me.  I'd love to hear from them.)

Thanks.

Peter

8 comments:

  1. I used Samantha Bagood at CoverPub to do my cover for The Sad Girl. She includes a Facebook timeline image for free in all of her packages, and can do other similar work as well. Basic ebook cover is $150.

    She's at http://coverpub.samanthabagood.com/

    My cover is at http://indefixa.ravensbeak.com/cover.

    If you want, I'll email you some of the iterations we went through.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I know a guy who might fit the bill:

    http://jeremiahdraws.blogspot.com

    You can contact him through his website.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Peter, try looking at an issue of Locus magazine, or look at the artists showcased at the WorldCons. Texas was the sponser for the last one, LoneStarCon II, they may be able to get you in touch with some artists/graphic designers!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sharing this on Facebook to see if any of my friends are keen. Also, have you looked at DeviantArt and ConceptShips? Those aren't only for artists for hire, but I bet many would be amenable to the idea.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I posted on Craig's List under "Creative Gigs." I quite explicitly said I need "spaceships, not people" and after wading through a few dozen replies I had all of two that showed any real promise. Lots of talent, but none in the right genre or style. Some folks drew / painted / photographed nothing BUT people, and they were just sending out a generic form letter to anyone needing an "illustrator." Anyway, I'll have to exchange a few emails with the two, see how that goes, before I says it's the way to go.
    Grace: LOTS of folks have pointed me to Deviant Art, but after spending hours and hours looking though there, I didn't find anything remotely close enough. My impression was some of the art VERY was good, but the community wasn't; that is, many of the artists struck me not as artistic businesses looking for jobs, but as people with talent and other things to do, so they posted stuff for a "stroke my ego, and I'll do some more of what amuses me, unless you throw a LOT of money my way" sort of thing. Again, that is certainly not true of all of them, but too many gave me that impression. I don't want to work with an "artiste" (/nose in air, French accent) but an artistically skilled professional interested in bringing MY vision to light.
    Conceptships is a new one to me, I'll have to check it out. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  6. A lot of places split this job in two - "artist" (who does the image) and "cover designer" (who lays out the text, any borders, etc). I do a job very similar to a "cover designer", but in a different industry.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I went through the college fine arts and selling oil paintings on the side thing, didn't find a teaching job so I had to go another direction. I taught myself how to apply all the things I knew about art to computer graphics. I have been designing online products and logos for several years. It's very competitive but I managed to make some money along the way. Since my husband has been disabled, he reads your blog everyday and shares things with me from what you post. He just showed me this post and I thought I would give it a try. I designed a few ebook covers for a friend, I have a tendency to be too detailed and illustrative, realistic but I'm flexible. I have no problem with doing what the project holder wants, its their money and should represent their work, I'm just a conduit for their dream or idea. My email is maydb_7@yahoo.com, I can send some examples from my portfolio from there. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I had this girl do my book cover-

    http://www.viladesign.net/home

    I told her exactly what I wanted, she told me if she could do it or not, and after about 30 emails back and forth, we came up with something that I'm pretty happy with. Here it is-

    http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FA5PKJQ


    also, there is a website out there somewhere that you can go to, explain what you want, what you are going to pay, and then these designers from all over the world will design a cover and show it to you, competing for your business. You get to pick out which one you like the best, and I think that most of those people are willing to make changes also.

    ReplyDelete

ALL COMMENTS ARE MODERATED. THEY WILL APPEAR AFTER OWNER APPROVAL, WHICH MAY BE DELAYED.