RSS Feed

Search...

Archive for 2010


creative review has a nice little feature today on a series of jd salinger book covers designed by seb lester.

It turns out that JD Salinger had some very basic (and strict) rules about how he wanted his book covers to look. He was adamant that the only copy that should appear on his books was his name and the title of the book. No quotes or plot summary, no author biography. And definitely no images. Just the title and his name. “Working with John Hamilton at Hamish Hamilton I developed two possible directions for the covers,” explains Lester of his approach to the commission. “One was relatively conservative and classical in nature [see the version on the left in the rough workings below]. The other [on the right, below] was more specifically American in feel, a mid-twentieth century style script.”

here are two concept-in-progress sketches…

seb lester work in progress

and here are the finished comps…

seb lester comps

oh my goodness, just think of the hours and hours of work that went into that hand lettering. turns out four book covers in total were designed, and the hand-drawn type is now known as “the salinger.”

you can see the finished book covers here.

artwork from welivenow.org.

the working proof is an initiative of sub-studio founders anna corpron and sean auyeung. their goal is to build a collection of great, limited-edition, affordable artwork from some of the best artists out there. but there’s a catch (and it’s a good one!). 15% of the proceeds from the sale of each print goes to the artist’s charity of choice.

for example, 15% of the $45 purchase price of this print by amy ruppel (love her! well, not literally. i mean, i’ve never met her. but i do love her work.) will benefit american forests.

similarly, 15% of the $30 purchase price of this print by karolin schnoor will benefit transportation alternatives.

and this fancy dress print by yasmine surovec? 15% of its $35 purchase price benefits kids in need foundation.

i’m always on the lookout for new colour palette inspiration, and i found some goodies at january’s couture shows. using css drive’s image palette tool, this look from christian dior

turns into this super fresh-looking set of colours.


similarly, this look from jean paul gaultier

translates into this set of moody blues:

now that’s a tool i can use every day!