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Outside of the hundred or so fonts available on publishing software, there are thousands of other fonts and every good designer has a big collection. Professional fonts cost anywhere from $10-$50 and I like to buy at least one new font for every book cover (this cost is included in my pricing). A good font can even appear hand-illustrated – such as on my cover for The Modigliani Girl by Jacqui Lofthouse.
Thank you so much Bridget, several fellow bloggers and authors have been joining me each Friday for this challenge and discovering the eye appeal and then importance of that 5 min window you have to sell your book. Get the cover right, the book description tantalising, the price competitive and find some genuine readers who will rave about it and you have a winner.
But if you’ve already missed the potential buyer because their eye rolled right past your book cover then the rest of the dale is even harder.
Any one can join the challenge – if you tweet it use #FridayFiveChallenge
Good advice, even though it’s always hard to fork out the cash!
I think it’s the one thing you should spend money on – provided you’ve got friends with the skills to copy edit
Useful you brought the matter up but Rosie’s ‘five minute window’? Do people really take that long to choose? Self publishing certainly in poetry, is still considered to be a no, no whatever the cover looks like!
I produced my book without professional help, it is the marketing that sells the book not the cover, in my humble opinion.
My book is still selling, seldom on Amazon, but locally six years after publication.
But the cover is marketing! I know poetry is a different but for fiction and non-fiction Amazon is potentially a very worthwhile global amrketplace.
Reblogged this on theowlladyblog.