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Welcome to the Cross-Product Creative Challenge. Thanks to everyone who participated in the Galactic Wildlife challenge. This one will demand a little more!
The Challenge:
Design the cover for a mystery novel, one that will stand out in a bookstore display. It can be noir, cozy, psychological, procedural, or 1930s pulp fiction. The exact genre is up to you.
Guidelines:
This example uses Firefly, FLUX.1 Kontext, Photoshop, Illustrator, Adobe Stock (the thumbprint), and of course InDesign.
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Wow!
Special mention to the diamond texture types!
Great job Rollan!
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Started with a free template from Adobe Stock. Generated a woodcut illustration with Firefly on the web. BComposited that upon the book cover in the template using Photoshop - selections and masking w/ blend modes and such. Added in black shape overlays and text for the title of the book. Finally, used a selection in Photoshop to generate the image of the little fellow on the path.
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Exquisite! And the composition gives it amazing depth, especially with that aerial perspective. Just delightful.
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Love the overall composition and the mock-up presentation.
Awesome work @Joseph Labrecque !
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I started in Firefly, where I generated a dark wooden wall, a shattered antique mirror, and a pair of faint glowing eyes as separate elements. Working with them individually gave me the flexibility to build the scene more intentionally. In Photoshop, I composited everything together, blended the reflections into the broken glass, and pushed the lighting with curves and gradient maps to create a tense, cinematic atmosphere. For typography, I paired Rig Solid from Adobe Fonts for the fractured title with Pacifico for the author’s name, keeping a clean contrast between the two. To add texture and depth, I pulled in an aged paper overlay from Adobe Stock and layered it into the background. Once the main cover was complete, I used Adobe Express to test the design on a mockup, then brought it back into Photoshop for some final refinements with the brush tool. Using this cross-product workflow helped me take an initial Firefly concept and develop it into a polished, bookstore-ready psychological thriller cover.
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That's an excellent and carefully thought out design. Thanks for the detailed summary of how it came together in the cross-product workflow. I think you hit the nail on the head about creating individual Firefly elements with, "Working with them individually gave me the flexibility to build the scene more intentionally."
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Ha Ha you got me, actually, that was the second version of that image. The original draft is below for your perusal, I hope your head will not spin now (ha ha)
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The color grading on the final image definitely improves the result, but either way it's a nice illustration of how you might integrate generative AI into a production workflow.
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thank you
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Great design Arif!
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Thank you, Franck!
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I created a book cover design for The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson (1959)
I started by creating a photo with firefly
here then added adjustments and created text with fx in photoshop webAnd finally I created this
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Thanks Mariam, for the great cover and the description. I confess I've barely glanced at Photoshop on the web, so it was interesting to see your treatment done with that tool.
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Thank you Alan, The photoshop on the web is an interesting tool. I like to use it for some work. It's user interface is very intuitive. And great for doing adjustments and editing.
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Nicely done!Thanks for proving that great design can be made with photoshop on the web!
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That's fantastic! As a fan of Robert Bringhurst, I love the typography, too.
As for wishing for more time... I hear you, but hey, take as long as you want! I worked on this piece in spare time for at least two weeks. There are 30 different versions of "Mavis Kern" (I tried every model available in Firefly), and a half-dozen type treatments that didn't make it into the final image. Even the almost-final Photoshop file had six Layer Comps so I could switch things up in InDesign. This stuff takes time in real life, so why not in an exercise like this, that's all about exploring creative ideas and where you don't have deadline pressure?
Here's an early iteration of the challenge image:
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Thanks and very kind of you to say so, @AlanGilbertson. I love your Pantone swatch concept. The font I used is Maxime.
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very nice Dave. You definitely have an eye for detail.
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Stunning! Love the way you used different tools to make this cover! You nailed it!
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In this project, I used Fresco, Illustrator, Photoshop and Adobe Stock.
The illustration had already been done on Fresco for last Halloween. I wanted to give it a second life. I dream of doing book covers and book illustrations, I enjoyed so much that challenge!
This book would belong to a Myths and Legends of the World collection and would tell the story of how an ordinary young woman (in appearance) would be chosen by the yokai to be an intermediary between the realm of the living and the realm of the dead (inspired by In/Spectre), provided she agreed to sacrifice her right eye (reference to Odin, even though for him it was to know the future, and during the journey to Persephone and Eurydice: I like to see how similar myths and legends from different cultures can sometimes be).
Process:
- Woman painting done on Fresco and I generated the little butterflies in Photoshop.
- Sakura pattern design of the book spine and the artwork background made with Illustrator and turned into a pattern with Photoshop.
- Choice of a nice book mock-up on Stock with a thick, glossy cover.
- Use of Dynamic Text in Ps for the fake Editor logo.
- Symmetric layout to emphasize the missing eye (=> asymmetric face).
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Very cool. Like the vibe and colours.
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Thank you so much Oh.N8
I appreciate 😊
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