The Book Cover Trend of Text on Old Paintings

(nytimes.com)

15 points | by zdw 3 days ago ago

9 comments

  • Daub 40 minutes ago

    The thing that bothers me about this trend is that, for the most part, only details of paintings are used. To me, a cropped detail never looks complete. It is like a book missing half its chapters.

  • ajot 3 hours ago

    Greatly done by Standard Ebooks too, I guess for the aesthetic as well as for old paintings being in public domain.

  • Papazsazsa an hour ago

    Publishers will pay a graphic designer a few hundred dollars for a cover and aren't willing to spend for photography or original art, so this is what you get: images in the public domain.

  • jerbear4328 5 hours ago
  • edgarvaldes 4 hours ago

    A forever trend for classical music album covers.

  • cardamomo 4 hours ago

    Of all the book cover design trends, I think I like this one the best. I certainly prefer it to blobby illustrations or poor imitations of Saul Bass. I wonder what the next trend will be!

    • yallpendantools 3 hours ago

      Being that I don't judge books by their covers, I don't really have a strong opinion on these trends. I do have, however, a very strong visceral repulsion to a few of the covers presented here. They are fugly as heck:

      - "My Year of Rest and Relaxation" looks like the first time I discovered background images and `<font color=""></font>`. The title, of all things, is unreadable with that color. I googled and there are better versions (still with the pink color scheme, mind you) of this cover.

      - "Disappoint Me" (or should it be written "DISAPPOINT ME"?) looks like the first time someone made a meme after they learned how to lasso-cut a portion of an image into a new layer. There is, again, that poisonous pink that does readability no favors. FWIW, it has successfully disappointed me indeed. There seems to be a version of the book that doesn't fit this trend but reads so much better.

      - "Seduction Theory" I'm glad Clippy seems to have found a job at graphic design after that long stint as an office assistant. Alas, old habits die hard, I guess. Unfortunately, neither the Brush Script MT(-esque) label telling me it is a novel nor the Word Art effects give a seductive mood. It gives a very puberty vibe, however, as it reminds me when I designed the Christmas Party poster in my freshman year, and pop has just upgraded the family computer to MS Office 2003.

      • wredcoll 40 minutes ago

        > Being that I don't judge books by their covers, I don't really have a strong opinion on these trends.

        What do you think the purpose of covers is then?

    • mc32 4 hours ago

      Austere bas relief gold print on cloth covers.