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Lillian De Jesus

How to Design a Book Cover for Ebooks and More

By Lillian De Jesus on September 7, 2017 10 Comments

Writing a book or story can be incredibly fulfilling to a writer. Getting words and ideas out to the world can be liberating. However, the one issue that self-publishing authors always seem to face is promoting their book or story. The first way to promote a book is to have an attractive and relevant cover. You may have heard the old English idiom, “Never judge a book by its cover.” but please take to heart that most people will judge a book by its cover. It’s the first thing they’ll see when browsing for something to read. It has to stand out from the thousands of books or stories on the digital book shelf. How can one choose?! Hopefully, you have an intriguing title and as for the book cover, we’d like to offer a few tips on how to design a book cover for ebooks, Wattpad, and more.

Research Three Items Before You Design a Book Cover

Genre-Look

Depending on the genre of the book, you’ll have to consider if a photo background or color background will be best. If you’re not sure which would be best for your book, do some research and take a look at Amazon. Search by genre and you’ll quickly find some significant differences.

Editor's Picks on Teen and Young Adult Books

Take a look at the Editor’s Picks for Teens and Young Adults. Almost all of them were illustrated covers except for one in the Non-Fiction category. That’s a tip off that if you’re writing for teens or young adults, hiring an illustrator for your cover would be best.

Best Books for Mystery and Thriller

You’ll see in the Mystery and Thriller genre, the book covers are photo backgrounds with large text.

That brings in another tip to consider – typography. Understand when creating a book cover the image will be rendered into a thumbnail image. That means super-tiny print for the eyes. If you want people to see the title and image on the cover, the title must be large and the image must be in high-resolution.

Typography

The font you choose will be of utmost importance because it can make or break an image, especially if makes a potential reader confused. Make sure if you have a light-hearted romance book then use a whimsical, thin, or script font to portray what the book’s topic can reveal in its title.

Susan Mallery Books

Take the example above. The title fonts are fun and light, while the author name is in a simple font like Helvetica.

If the font does not match the relevant title or book genre then it can send mixed messages to a potential reader.

Font example of what not to use for a book cover.
Yuck… not romantic.

The great thing about choosing fonts is that there are so many to choose from! When you design the cover in Stencil, there are over 2,100 Google fonts to choose from or you can upload your own that you’ve purchased and had rights to. If you don’t see one to your liking, you can always shop around at sites like Creative Market, The HungryJPEG, etc.

High-Resolution Images

Images are extremely important to provide a background that will convey a bit about the story as well as clarify the title. Many people will find images on Google and that is a sure-fire way to get into legal trouble. Please do not obtain images that way. In Stencil, we provide a collection of more than 1.2M royalty-free high-resolution photos that can be used for commercial or personal use, this includes book covers.

Take a look at these most read e-books from Amazon. You’ll notice the quality high-resolution photos.

Hillbilly Elegy book
Countryside Rural background

Before We Were Yours book

Even if you choose not to use a photo from the Stencil collection and use your own photo, make sure it’s high quality and not blurry.

Design a Book Cover in Stencil

Once you have completed your research you can get started with designing!  Now that you understand how your book should look based on related genre, shopped around for fonts, and have an idea for the background photo then pop into Stencil to create the book cover.

Most people who are self-publishing choose Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing. In the KDP Amazon guidelines, the ideal cover dimensions should be 2,560 height x 1,600 width. You can save those custom dimensions in Stencil as shown below.

Custom Dimensions in Stencil

Let’s use a mystery genre to create a book cover! Love a good mystery.

Search for dark in Stencil for mystery genre

All I had to do was search for a ‘dark’ photo in the Stencil collection. I found so many but this wolf photo was picture perfect for a mystery thriller novel.

Now for my title… (Hopefully you have one already picked out because that may be the hardest part for me!)

Our title will be, “The Journey as a Lycanthrope”.

I chose Buenard font at size 133 for the first part of the title. It should be nice and crisp for all to see even as a thumbnail. Then I chose a more dramatic font that looks a bit shady for Lycanthrope (AKA werewolf). For mystery genre, all the authors have their names nice and big almost as big as the title however in a simple font. I used an all caps font such as CINZEL.

sample book cover made in Stencil

That took about 10 minutes to do. Very simple but I achieved a look for an intriguing mystery book about werewolves.

When you’ve completed your design, click on the Print (300dpi) button, make sure it’s a JPG and click on download. You’re all set to upload to KDP or any other self-publishing site that accepts JPG format. By clicking on the Print (300dpi) button, you’re ensuring the book cover is at its best resolution. This is particularly important if you want to also sell your book on CreateSpace, which will allow you to have a paperback version of your book along with your Kindle version on Amazon. They have a Cover Creator where you can upload your JPG book cover that you made in Stencil and it will help create the back cover along with spine. For this process, they state it must be an image with 300dpi or it will be rejected. Be sure to click the Print button!

Sample Book Cover 300dpi

You can use this same process to create covers for stories on Wattpad! The only difference is to use custom dimensions of 256 pixels width x 400 pixels height.

The Power of  300dpi 

We added support for 300dpi downloads that are ideal for eBooks and anything you plan to print. We hope this will help with all your book design efforts and promotional work. Remember to click on the Print media type for awesome ads and marketing materials that you can print at a printing service. Now you’re bringing all your digital work into local business efforts. Pretty neat, huh!

You can even create designs and upload them to a service like Zazzle, to create t-shirts and other customizable items. Take note that although you can design these awesome items you can’t choose custom dimensions in inches. If you’d like to print a poster, you can upload your image to Zazzle and it will automatically size into the poster settings you’re looking for. However, if you’re looking to do a banner with large dimensions in inches, then this would not be the best route to take care of that. Keep in mind the power of 300dpi works on small print products in Stencil.

Are we sparking any ideas here for you?

Will you create a book cover or something even more exciting?

Let us know in the comments!

 

How to Design a Book Cover for Ebooks and More

Creativity, Product Updates Amazon, book cover, custom dimensions, design, Kindle Direct Publishing

Lillian De Jesus

About Lillian De Jesus

Lillian De Jesus loves visual marketing! Any tool that helps a business increase exposure and can help build a community, she's all over it. You can find Lillian baking sweet treats and drinking coffee in the Indiana countryside. Or find her on Twitter.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Our World Enterprises LLC says

    September 7, 2017 at 7:47 pm

    Awesome Sauce! Great work @Stencil!

    Reply
    • Lillian De Jesus says

      September 7, 2017 at 10:54 pm

      Thank you! ?

      Reply
  2. sasukhram says

    September 8, 2017 at 1:04 am

    I JUST figured out how to do this today for a report I created! I think I may need to change the dimensions, though, since they weren’t quite the same as what you stated. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Lillian De Jesus says

      September 8, 2017 at 4:49 am

      Our pleasure! Glad this was helpful. ?

      Reply
  3. Kaye Nutman says

    September 8, 2017 at 2:31 am

    Excellent for those of us new to cover design. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Lillian De Jesus says

      September 8, 2017 at 4:47 am

      Our pleasure, Kaye! ?

      Reply
  4. Shawn Mac says

    September 10, 2017 at 12:16 am

    Love Stencil!

    Reply
  5. Akasha Lonsdale says

    September 11, 2017 at 5:14 pm

    Brilliant information Lillian. I love Stencil and found this very helpful. Thank you for your generosity in sharing so much detail. 🙂

    Reply
    • Lillian De Jesus says

      September 17, 2017 at 3:06 pm

      Glad it was helpful, Akasha!

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Unique Ways to Create Social Media Posts with Stencil's Resizable Images - Stencil says:
    November 2, 2017 at 12:33 am

    […] theme. Here’s a book cover we created in Stencil (yes, you can do that, more on book covers here). Once uploaded to Stencil, set it to a photo background that’ll spark conversation and […]

    Reply

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