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Last week I was in a designing groove, so had some fun with the next WhiteFire historical, due to release in May. Sweet Mountain Music is a really fun story set in the Pacific Northwest in the 1890s. Chloe Williston is determined to make a name for herself as a journalist and earn her father’s respect–and thinks the way to do it is to tag along on a handsome naturalist’s expedition. His search–for the legendary Great North American ape (a.k.a. Sasquatch or Bigfoot).
She has the right look for Chloe–honey brown hair, the old books in her arms are great. But I wanted a bit more quirk. And blue eyes. And the costume sure isn’t right–the shirt could pass, but that skirt is way too slim.
And Suzie specifically requested a pith helmet. So.
I took a public domain photo of this bustle-era dress:
and copied the bustle part onto Chloe. I tilted her head a bit to give her a more playful look, and also added a helmet.
The result was this model:
Plugged it in behind her, adjusted some lighting, a layer for texture,
and voila. I did the usual dance while trying to find the perfect fonts and frame to offset the title, played with positioning etc. I landed on a combination I liked after just a bit of trial and error.
I just needed one more thing. Purely for fun. =) Something to harken back to that Sasquatch search. Something…something like this.
Nowhere too noticable, mind you. Sasquatch is a hard fella to find, after all. But I bet you can spot it. 😉 Here’s the final front cover.
I have to admit, I loved it as soon as it came together–it felt like “it” to me. So I sent it to Suzie, who agreed that it captured all the elements we wanted to capture. She loved it too, so there we go! The final cover!
While I was at it, I went ahead and built the full cover too. Back copy may yet be tweaked, and that endorsement is obviously a place holder, LOL.
Overall, I gotta say I love how this one turned out–which is all the better because it had me stumped for so long. But you know, for two days’ work, this was a lot of fun. Bring on the next, WhiteFire! 😉
Aw, shucks. =) I suppose I have gotten that job, though a bit by accident, LOL.
Awesome, Roseanna! I really like that cover as well. 🙂 You so could have gotten a job as a graphic designer . . .
Love the cover!! 🙂 This was a fun post to read. 🙂
Love it! Pretty.
Such a fun cover!
It's such a fun story! So happy to add it to our lineup. =)
LOL. Had to put that fun bit in. =)
Thanks, June!
Why thank you, flower. =) And more posts like this sounds fun!
Thanks, Normandie! Maybe I'll make this a series and give a play-by-play of all our covers. 😉
great post. I love this story!!! Congrats Suzie and Roseanna!
Love your covers and loved reading how this one came together. I completely missed Sasquatch's footprint in the lower right hand corner the first time I looked at it! Good job!
Roseanna, Enjoyed this step by step design. Great job.
Now this was a SUPER fun post to read – and watching this cover come alive is VERY cool. Hope you do more posts like this. Cover is PERFECT. What fun!
Such a good cover, Roseanna! Loved hearing how you built it.
You never know! 🙂
Well you just never know–he could totally be there! 😉
Thank you Rosanna! I love this cover so much, and it's fun to learn how you created it. I showed the cover to a lady yesterday who said she can see a Sasquatch hiding in the trees. 😉
Thanks, Abbi! And yes, the book is so much fun. =)
Mostly from iStock and Shutterstock. These came from a combination of those. The public domain one I found from commons.wikimedia.org, and the texture I don't remember, LOL–I did a search for free Photoshop textures and found it on a blog that lists lots of freebies like that.
Wow, this is so cool. I love the cover! It's always fun to learn how book covers are designed. I can't wait to read the book 🙂
Just out of curiosity, where do you get your stock images?
Great job on this cover! The story sounds like such a fun one!