Book Design Process Following is an example of a typical design assignment: Example: Greg Tamblyn, "Atilla the Gate Agent" Step 1: Getting started Greg Tamblyn is a well known entertainer, raconteur, singer, songwriter and humorous writer. He was referred to me by another client when he decided he wanted to create a book out of his travel stories that were at once humorous, poignant and affecting. I always start with either the manuscript or at minimum, an interview in which I find out about the book. In his case, he sent me the manuscript. He had a great title, based on one of his stories in which a favorite guitar was mutilated because of an unfortunate experience with an airport gate agent. He wanted to be able to sell the book at his concerts. The book was not long, a bit over 100 pps. He selected a 5 x 8" format for it so that it would be a bit larger than pocket size. He knew he wanted the cover to have a humorous tone, or reflect his generally keen but gentle wit, but otherwise had no idea what he wanted it to look like, so he elected to have me produce three different themes/approaches. At first, he didn't think he wanted himself featured on the cover. I knew that the cover should reflect these key points: it should be humorous/witty, clue the reader that it was about Greg's traveling tales as he worked his way around the globe, support the title, 'Atilla the Gate Agent' with appropriate visuals having to do with travel/airports...maybe even illustrate that particular story. I came up with three approaches with that: in mind... a sort of Monty Python pictoral collage that worked in bits of most of the stories, starting with a fearsome Gate Agent, a simpler pictoral of his favorite guitar with a whimsical title treatment that only hinted at funny travel stories, and a high contrast color version with a cartoon of Greg on the cover: |