Posts tagged ‘yuk’

January 18th, 2012

[ Creativity and Cash ]

Interesting thing happened yesterday. I received an email from a friend, an author friend, who resides in the US of A. He let me know that a friend of his, also an author, needed to have some book covers redesigned. More specifically, EBOOK covers.

Wonderful! The middle of January and the work is starting to come in. Or so I thought. What follows is an account of how skewed things have become, especially when ‘creative’ endeavours are involved.  I’ll try to explain…

Living in South Africa presents one with certain challenges when dealing with overseas clients. Communication is an obvious one, but emails, BBM, Skype and the like manages to take care of that fairly painlessly. So to receive a brief need not be the worst headache one has to face.

Cost however, is another ball game altogether. Since the exchange rate, whether it be Rand to Dollar, or the Euro, or what have you, does not favour those of us living in this little muddy backwater.

As a result, one has to be ultra careful in how one quotes out a job. This is where, one would think, experience, ability, a good track record as a designer and the like would play a part. A positive part. To my horror, I now realise that this is not the case. I would like to think that the client would feel safe in the knowledge that I am going to give his/her cover design all the attention it deserves.

The only thing that matters, or so it seems, is the amount of cash involved. After I sent my rates off, I was told that I’m charging too much. Far too much it seems. This got me thinking.

Was I screwing myself out of work?

Am I charging unfairly?

Are my rates completely out of line with what other ‘designers’ are charging?

Time to do more research and investigate this matter further. Holy crap! Was I in for a surprise!

What I discovered online is truly shocking. Maybe not to some, but certainly to me. Because, as an avid reader, and a designer/artist with some thirty-plus years experience, I figure that given the right circumstances, I generally deliver a product that satisfies most. The publisher, the author, and ultimately the reader.

Books ARE judged by their covers people!

There are designers, artists, charlatans, bullshitters, call them what you will, who are charging a fraction of what I charge, for what I consider to be a vastly inferior product. Many might disagree. Perhaps it’s a cultural thing. Maybe I lack sufficient bad taste to go down this road. Something akin to someone’s aunt’s cousin’s kid who has just gotten their first PC and is now a digital artist. That’s like saying because I like watching Top Gear I’m the Stig!

I take time and care to do credit to a cover. I generally spend far more time than is quoted for to ensure some measure of success. I say some, since it’s unlikely that everyone will see things my way. Creative likes and dislikes are highly subjective, but so what?! It does-not-matter! The argument seems to be that an EBook cover needs to cost less than a cover for a paperback. Really?

For example. There are DESIGNERS, not hacks, who charge anywhere from $300 – $1000 for a cover. And there are others (the hacks) who charge between $30 and $90. I charge somewhere from the bottom to the middle of the former range, depending on the client’s needs. How on earth does one put in the necessary effort for $30?!

I accept the fact that while some EBooks sell for less than their paperback counterparts, it is certainly not always the case, but is this really my problem? While I can understand someone wanting to pay less for something that once done, might not even sell one copy, I cannot understand them being happy with an inferior product.

So what to do? Do I revise my quoting system and charge less, spend less time, make fewer changes, care less and basically toss my artistic integrity in the bin? Absolutely not. The only other possibility is to create cheaper pre designed covers that only need a title and the author’s name to be added. There you go, thirty bucks thanks, pay at the door!

Perhaps those people who have need of a creative service need to carefully consider why they are employing someone to create something unique, or perhaps they need to reconsider their options and get a day job.

So in sad conclusion, everything boils down to money. Paying too much is not good, but then neither is too little.

Here endeth the lesson.

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May 12th, 2010

[ Frank Frazetta – A Legend Lost ]







I was shocked upon waking this morning to find that Frank Frazetta, the father of fantasy art had left this life for another, aged 82. 

The adorer of the lush thigh and the soft, full breast, the muscles that threatened to burst open the skin that contained it, the renderer of undiscovered worlds is gone. But he leaves behind a legacy few can match.

I was introduced to FF in the early seventies, when an art teacher of mine brought me a book of Frazetta paintings from an overseas trip.

My world literally exploded before my eyes! Though I would not like to compare my skills, nor that of any other living artist with Frazetta’s, his influence on the way I visualise this earthly plane cannot be over-emphasised.

As a painter he probably had many equals on a technical level. Certainly there have been many who have tried to emulate his rich, lavish style, the rough, almost careless brush strokes and the vitality he imbued his characters with.

But, as good as they all are, and some are very good, there will never be another Frank Frazetta.

His works will hopefully continue to inspire artists, young and old for generations to come. And since I don’t possess the vocabulary nor the word skills to adequately describe what his efforts have meant to me, I will add just this.

Thank you Frank. Sleep well, you’ve earned the rest.

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April 29th, 2009

[ The Yukster ]


Self Portrait
Mixed Media on Paper