29.6.14
28.6.14
My Cover XIV: Star Cross'd Lovers
In honour of one of the most famous almost-fourteen-year-olds in the history of literature.
I tried to capture the feud in the colours used for the cover. Romeo and Juliet on opposite sides, yet with bloodshed touching all. The lovers are connected with both a heart and a dagger.
I tried to capture the feud in the colours used for the cover. Romeo and Juliet on opposite sides, yet with bloodshed touching all. The lovers are connected with both a heart and a dagger.
27.6.14
My Cover XIII: Unlucky Thirteen
What better play to present in the thirteenth My Cover post, than the unluckiest of plays: The Scottish Play!
I used the main character's family tartan and slowly faded it into red to show the character's descent into evil and murder.
I used the main character's family tartan and slowly faded it into red to show the character's descent into evil and murder.
26.6.14
25.6.14
24.6.14
My Cover X: Friends, Romans, Countrymen
What better way to celebrate reaching roman numeral x than with some Roman plays?
For the plays set in the Roman Empire, I'm bordering the covers with columns and trying to capture key details in text. Julius Caesar has a dagger and laurel wreath replacing letters and a bloody font reveals Caesar's fate. For Antony and Cleopatra I used fonts representative of each of the characters' regions and turned an ampersand into an asp.
23.6.14
My Cover IX: Shakespeare Week!
Now that summer break is here I can start working on one of my summer goals: to read at least one new Shakespeare play! (Can you tell I'm an English teacher?) To tie in with that, I've devoted a week to some Shakespeare covers.
To begin, though it isn't midsummer yet, it is summer, so here is A Midsummer Night's Dream.
I wanted to keep it simple with a night sky above a forest to capture the setting, plus changing fonts for the title to capture the transformation that so permeates the play.
21.6.14
My Cover VIII: Jekyll and Hyde
Here are two versions of my cover for The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. I wanted to capture the duality of the character and thought that a reflection and yin-yang would show off how they are opposites, yet united. I like the second one, with Jekyll in the light and Hyde reflected in the dark the best.
20.6.14
My Cover VII: The Diary of a Young Girl
This is another book my students could read as part of an independent novel study. I wanted to capture the diary aspect of the book so used a pencil sketch of Anne and a lined paper background.
19.6.14
My Cover VI: Flowers for Algernon
I love this book and love the recurring motif of the maze. How well Charlie and Algernon can navigate the maze shows not only their intelligence, but how well they can navigate life itself. After working the title letters in I was stumped with how to include the author's name. I'm not fully pleased with what I came up with, but it was better than anything else I tried.
18.6.14
My Cover V: The Grinch!
In making this cover I relearned the actual title for the book. I had "The Grinch who Stole Christmas" in my head. Was that the movie? I don't remember and don't feel like looking it up. I tried to keep it whimsical and focus more on the stealing of Christmas than the Grinch.
17.6.14
My Cover IV: The Hound of the Baskervilles
12.6.14
Sushi Lesson
Always ask what's in a roll before you order it, especially if you're late into an all you can eat session. Ordered the DF roll from Sushi Hut. Was stuffed to the eyeballs when it came. Kudos to KBL for knowing it'd be deep fried, but neither of us predicted there would be four kinds--FOUR KINDS--of fish inside!
On the plus side, I was too full to eat all of it. On the double plus side, it wasn't real bad.
VERDICT: Polite. The sort of polite where if you accidentally order it at an all you can eat restaurant you eat it because you have to.
On the plus side, I was too full to eat all of it. On the double plus side, it wasn't real bad.
VERDICT: Polite. The sort of polite where if you accidentally order it at an all you can eat restaurant you eat it because you have to.
9.6.14
My Cover III: Middle-Earth Spectacular!
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| I've tried to capture the two trees in this stylized Silmaril, as Fëanor captured their light in the Silmarils. |
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| A simplified cover emphasizing Minas Tirith's position between the two towers. |
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