Skip to main content

IWSG: My Own Book Covers with Few Exceptions

Logo of the Insecure Writer's Support Group with a light house in the background.

It's the first Wednesday of the month and so itā€™s time for another Insecure Writerā€™s Support Group (IWSG) post! In an IWSG post, we writers bring our writing challenges and problems out into the open to share with each other and try to offer solutions. Well, it's already February and so we've made it through the first month of a new year! I've started this year out by trying to take a load off of myself and not concentrate too much on the marketing side of the writing and to focus much more on the writing itself, including my fiction. Last year my most current book that I've been working on, "Bad Apps", a collection of short fiction about strange and deadly mobile apps, kept getting postponed in its release because I was playing the role of marketer too much and Iā€™m not a marketer, I'm a writer. And ā€œBad Appsā€ still has yet to see publication. So, this year Iā€™ve laid off the extensive marketing and plan to continue doing so. However, one form of marketing I do plan to continue is making the illustrations for my own book covers. And so that brings me to our optional question of the month: If you are an indie author, do you make your own covers or purchase them? If you publish trad, how much input do you have about what goes on your cover?

One of the reasons, that I publish indie is so I can do my own book covers. (However, itā€™s not the main reason, but thatā€™s a story for another time). My original intention had been to go into doing exhibition art. Ever since I was a kid I loved to draw and paint (including coloured pencil). But, as I discovered over time that I was a writer more than an artist, I decided to emphasise a writing career. However, I loved art too much to give it up or just leave it at a hobby. Thatā€™s why when I discovered that self-publishing was the way to go, I decided to do the illustrations for my own book covers. So, to answer the question of the month, I do my own covers but only the illustrations. I hire someone else to do the designing and formatting of the cover itself. Formatting covers involves precise measurements which I learned the hard way that I donā€™t do well with. 

One exception to doing my own cover illustrating is my upcoming collection of short fiction that I mentioned above, "Bad Apps". I donā€™t do digital art; I do old school, freehand. But because the subject matter to ā€œBad Appsā€ is computer technology, I'm planning to hire a digital artist to do its cover. I want it to reflect the digital technology of mobile apps. Still, I'll do the primary sketch of the illustration to show what I want to go into the digital version. 

To find out more about "Bad Apps", sign up for my free author's newsletter, "Night Creatures' Call"

Do you do your own cover illustrations for your books or do you hire someone to do them? For those who publish through traditional means, how much do you try influencing the appearance of your covers and, when/if you do, is it a challenge when dealing with the publisher?


Todayā€™s IWSG is brought to you by these super co-hosts: Jacqui Murray, Ronel Janse van Vuuren, Pat Garcia, and Gwen Gardner! IWSG was founded by awesome author Alex Cavanaugh, writer of the Cassa Series of novels!

Until next time . . .


Comments

  1. Sounds like you have fun with your covers :-)

    Ronel visiting for IWSG day Strategies to Be a Successful Author

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Fun but it is a lot of work. It requires a lot of patience.

      Delete
  2. That's cool you can do the artwork. Smart to let a digital artist do that cover though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, at least for me digital art is a lot harder than it looks.

      Delete
  3. Good for you, using your strengths and leaving the formatting things to the professionals, Steven! I'll be hiring a professional. Have a creative month!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Book-To-Movie: Stephen Kingā€™s 'The Raft'

Credit: Pixabay.com It's the third Saturday of the month and so that means it's time for another Book-To-Movie ! In a Book-To-Movie we review a book and its movie adaptation. One of the reasons I as a horror fan donā€™t read a lot of Stephen Kingā€™s work is because most of it consists of novels that go more than 400 pages. I have a short attention span when it comes to reading, ironically since I consider myself an avid reader, and so I normally wonā€™t read a work that is much more than the equivalent to a 350-page mass market paperback. The other reason why I donā€™t read a lot of Kingā€™s work is that, as literary scholars will tell you, a lot of his writing is poor. However, he does have some good writing in his works, especially his earlier stuff, including his short horror tales. So if I read anything by Stephen King itā€™s usually his short stories or novellas. One of his collections Iā€™ve read is Skeleton Crew which includes some of his good, or at least...

Book-To-Movie: ā€˜The Hound of the Baskervillesā€™

Credit: Wikimedia Commons I apologise for posting outside our regular post-day which is late Saturday night/early Sunday morning. However, I got behind on several things last week and so had to postpone the post to today.  Iā€™ve been a reader of Sir Arthur Conan Doyleā€™s Sherlock Holmes books ever since I was 11. What Iā€™ve always liked so much about the series is that, like a good horror story, the stories often take place in dark settings and involve bizarre cases. Conan Doyleā€™s novel, ā€œThe Hound of the Baskervillesā€, definitely contains these elements. Itā€™s a detective story that crosses over into the gothic horror genre. Several movie adaptations of the novel have been made that go as far back as a 1915 German silent film. In 1959 Hammer Studios released a version starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. As much as Iā€™m a fan of the Hammer horror films, I have not seen that one yet. The only one that Iā€™ve seen so far is the 1939 adaptation starring that other big name in classic...

Return to Fiction Writing; Graphic Novel Based on Lost Horror Film

Credit: Wikimedia Commons Some of you may had noticed that I skipped posting back on the 4th of the month, as far as Monday posting goes. I posted for the IWSG blog hop that Wednesday and it didn't make up for that Monday's missed post since I said I had to keep it short. I had to reduce the writing during that week because, as I also said in that IWSG post, my mom passed away back in October and so that was the week of her funeral. I just got back on track earlier last week (Wednesday I think it was) and so that included returning to working on my fiction projects, namely my upcoming short story collection, "Bad Apps". Needless to say, I'm back on track with my weekly blog posts. So, I have some about my latest progress on "Bad Apps" and, in sci fi/fantasy news, about an upcoming graphic novel adaptation of a lost silent horror film that starred Lon Chaney Sr. Back On Track with ā€˜Bad Appsā€™ My short hiatus from my fiction writing wasn't really a ful...