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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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That sounds like a good recipe!
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Lovely noir mystery vibe! Excellent recipe!
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Having Firefly render a night train compartment (don't ask, it just doesn't know anything about trains, just as if the Orient Express never existed). And then having it render a dagger. Combining that in Photoshop and then autotracing the thing in Illustrator to get a cheap look like a 1960ies detective novel. Borrowing the typography from 1960ies western genre novel though 😄
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Awesome, Monika! That's a brilliant idea, to image-trace it in Illustrator so as to grunge it up, which I just added to my collection of fabulous techniques to remember!
I don't know about the train. It does look reminiscent of an old-fashioned train compartment, but it's kind of a hybrid. There are hints of luxury sleeping trains, but the layout looks like British Railways (as it was then called) individual compartments that were common until the 1960s. A carriage was divided into compartments with facing seats and an exit door at each end. No corridor. I don't think British trains have those anymore, and I don't believe European trains ever did. But, yes, Firefly has its quirks, for sure!
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That was the layout of German nighttrains until the 2000s (when they abandoned the service), then ÖBB continued with the same carriages. Around the 2000s they also had a double decked layout and nowadays that also have those single pods. But still those 4 and 6 persons compartments exist on the EU mainland.
American carriages had this layout as in "Some like it hot", but nowadays have smaller compartments as well. That layout was what Firefly gave me initially and I had to describe the compartment in order to get it.
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Great work Monika! Love the chosen illustrative style and how red areas add drama to this cover!
You nailed it!
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Thank you!
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Given that I'm currently working on a game dev project and also reading a book about the history of Nintendo (entitled Super Mario by Jeff Ryan), I was inspired to take this challenge in a slighly different direction. Thus, my book cover is for: The Maltese Monkey which gives nods to The Maltese Falcon (a 1930 detective novel by Dashiell Hammett) and the beloved classic Mario franchises (Donkey Kong and Super Mario Bros. from Nintendo). In this story, Mario takes up the role as Sam Spade, Private Eye. He seeks to locate the missing statue of Donkey Kong and the culprits who stole it. His only clues are a smashed glass case that held the artifact and a note left at the crime scene with the words "The cake is a lie" scrawled on it.
For my initial design, I used Nano Banana and Photoshop to mock up my ideas. I eventually settled on the layout shown above. For the final scene I used various images and models (Firefly, Flux, Nano Banana) to generate elements of the scene which were composited in Photoshop. Final tweaks and color adjustments were made with Adobe Camera Raw. The Maltese Monkey logo was fleshed out in Photoshop and then brought to Illustrator where it was traced to create clean vector art. The elements were pulled together and the final cover design was created with Adobe Illustrator. The Maltese Monkey
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Damn, that's good! I wish I could give it extra upvotes. It's such a delightful mashup, and just brilliantly done as always. I can totally see this as a new Mario game or a Netflix show. You should pitch it!
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Haha! Thanks, Alan. I appreciate the kind words.
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Funny and well done Daniel!
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Thanks, Franck! I really like your comp as well.
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Started with the prompt "where is waldo" in firefly to get the cabin.
Then finished in Photoshop.
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That's a truly awesome prompt to start with! Love it! Your author is clearly destined for fame and fortune.
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I found this used book while cleaning out the attic... It's one of the best mystery books I've ever received for Christmas. After that, I never saw Christmas the same way again.
Workflow:
Scene and christmas ornament made with Firefly.
Everything has been pushed inside Photoshop for compositing work and to get the final background image.
Color Grading with camera Raw. Then, back to Photoshop for Title addition and Texturization
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That's a great composition. I love what you did with the light.
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Thanks Monika! I appreciate!
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Ooh! Creepy! Actually, I love the animation so much I watched it for about five minutes. Just superb. And I love your attention to detail. The composition (and compositing!), chiaroscuro, and the "used book" effect are dynamite. Thank you so much for this one.
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Thanks Alan for these kind comments. I appreciate!
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Brilliant work, Franck!
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Thanks Arif!
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