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type

a critical guide
for designers,
writers, editors,
& students
theory
how
why
p
r
a
c
t
i
c
e
thinking
with
entertaining
economical
essential
ellen lupton
2
ND
EDI TI ON
REVI SED & EXPANDED
principles
examples
exercises
type crimes
fonts
factoids
fun
{
MORE
How to Design and Produce
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
INDIE
PUBLISHING
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
Indie Publishing 101 | 13
Be warned that you are unlikely to ever make a big profit with POD publishing, because
the economy of scale is working against you. The unit cost of a POD book is usually too high
to make it a viable product for bookstore distribution, because both the distributor and the
bookstore need to add a substantial sum on top of the basic unit cost. (See more below
about distributing your book.) But if you are looking to make a small number of books for a
focused audience, POD is a great system that is becoming hipper and more widely used as
new companies enter the marketplace.
Hardcore D.I.Y. involves printing and binding your book entirely on your own, using your own
desktop printing equipment or other methods (such as offset or letterpress equipment). The
crafter, the book artist, or the politically motivated off-the-grid entrepreneur might want to go
this route, which is also great if you need just a few copies, and you need them right away.
ISSn & ISBn numbers
These ten- or thirteen-digit numbers constitute a unique address for your publication,
identifying its publisher as well as its title and geographic origins. No two ISBNs (for
books) or ISSNs (for periodicals) are alike.
Print on Demand Services
Lulu.com is the service we used
to produce this book. Lulu has a
user-friendly interface, a wide
range of formats, and its free.
There is no minimum order, and the
print quality is quite good. Basic
design skills required: you will need
to design and edit your book
yourself, and upload it as a PDF.
Blurb.com provides users with
its own free book design software,
so you dont need to have a page
layout program or any substantial
technical skills, and the resulting
designs are attractive in a
somewhat sterile, standardized
way. Dont use Blurb if you want
substantial control over your
layouts and typography. Blurbs
print quality is inferior to that of
Lulu.com.
FedEx/Kinkos and other copy
centers have evolved into substantial
POD providers. Visit your local store
and take a look at all the while-you-
wait printing and binding options.
Other POD services are
easily found via Internet search.
Many of them charge a fee for
design, editorial, and publishing
services, so study each company
carefully. Here are a few: iUniverse,
Authorhouse, Dog Ear Publishing ,
and Booklocker.
Book Surge is an Amazon
subsidiary that specializes in POD.
Book Surge has services for both
authors and publishers. Book Surge
charges a fee ($ at the time of this
posting) to create a users account
and begin the process. The fee
includes an ISBN number that will
be owned by Book Surge. You can
also provide your own ISBN number.
All Book Surge books are offered for
sale on Amazon.
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
12 | Indie Publishing 101
HOW
ProducIng Your Book
There are three basic ways to produce your book: conventional
printing, print on demand, and hardcore D.I.Y. The design guidelines
that weve developed in this booklet are relevant to any of these
production methods, which range from the high-end approach
pursued by the professional publisher to down-and-dirty techniques
that you can pull off with equipment in your own school, office,
or basement.
Conventional printing requires that you produce a substantial quantity of books in
advance (1,000 copies or more). Your cost will vary depending on the size, binding method,
number of pages, use of color, type of paper, number of pictures, and other factors, but
whatever your specs are, you will need to outlay some significant cash upfront. The more
copies you print, the lower the unit cost for each book (and the greater your initial
investment). This principle is called economy of scale, and it is the core idea behind all
mass production.
Commercial offset printers exist in every urban area; a designer will typically
request estimates from several printers, based on a detailed description of the project. You
can find a printer through word of mouth, talking to other artists, designers, or authors, or
you can go on-line or open the phone book. You might also choose to work with a print
broker who has relationships with many different printing companies, including factories in
Asia and other parts of the world. If you intend to make a serious profit on your book in the
long term, conventional printing is the way to go.
Print on Demand (POD) services are useful if you cant afford the cost of printing many
books at once. Various companies work with authors and publishers to print and bind a book
only when a customer orders it. The unit cost will be much higher than a mass-produced
book, but you wont need much capital in advance. Indeed, some services, such as Lulu.com,
offer their basic services for free. (You pay only when you order copies of the book, and there
is no minimum order.)
EBM Espresso Book Machine, available at American Book Center, Amsterdam
software:
Some print-on-demand
services provide their own
software, but most require
that you create a PDF fle.
best layout software:
Adobe InDesign.
Create a new document. Define correct document
size (for example, 6 inches x 6 inches), so that later,
you can print out document with crop marks.
(When printing, select Printer Marks>Crop Marks in
the print menu to get crop marks.)
Make a text frame. Select the Type tool and drag
it to make a frame. You can also change any frame
(of an shape) into a text box by clicking on it with
the Type tool. A cursor for text entry will appear.
Use the Character window to change the typeface,
size, line spacing, and other text attributes. Use the
Paragraph window to change alignment (flush left,
flush right, centered, justified).
Text Wrap. If a picture or text frame has a text wrap
value, then text from another frame will be forced to
wrap around it, rather than running on top of it or
behind it. Do this with the Text Wrap window. New
objects in InDesign have no text wrap value.
Hyphenation. Turn off automatic hyphenation
when you are working with centered or ragged
text, or with headlines of any kind. (You can always
put in hyphens by hand if needed.) Access the
Hyphenation window from the menu behind the
Paragraph window, or directly in the Paragraph
status bar at top of screen.
Manual kerning: Adjust letter spacing between two
letters. Adjusting the space between two letters is
called manual kerning. (The typeface already has
built-in kerning values. You are now adjusting it
according to your own judgment.) Position your
cursor between the letters you want to adjust and
use the option+arrow keys to move a letter left or
right in tiny increments. You probably wont need
to do this unless you are working with larger-scale
letters (headlines).
Tracking: Adjust letter spacing across an entire text
selection. When setting a word in all caps or small
caps, it is advisable to track your letters, or expand
the space between them. Select the text and type in a
Tracking value: (A V) in the Type palette.
THIS TexT IS All CAPS, NoT TrACkeD
THI S TexT I S All CAPS, TrACkeD 100
Threading text frames. You can connect two or
more text frames so that text flows from one frame
to another. This an important feature to to use when
designing a book. Select a text frame, and then click
the frames in-port or out-port (little red square with
a plus or minus) with the white arrow selector tool.
The arrow will become a loaded text icon. Position
the loaded text icon over the frame you want to
connect to. Text will fow into the new frame, or it
will draw a frame where your guidelines are.
Inserting, and deleting pages. Use the Pages menu
to insert, duplicate, and delete pages. Select a page
icon in the Pages window before deleting it. Grab the
page icons and move them around to reorder your
pages.
Master pages. A master page contains graphics that
appear on every new page of a document, such as
page numbers, headings, and guidelines. Select New
Master from the menu behind the Pages window
(a little white arrow indicates that an extra options
menu is available). Name the master, and put text
and other graphics on it. The master can now be
applied it to any and all pages. You can base a new
master on an existing master; you can have several
masters in one document; and you can turn an
existing page into a master. For more information,
see InDesigns on-line help.
indesign basics
To override master elements on a document
page, press command-shift while selecting the
element. This allows you to edit or delete the item.
Note that an overrided master item wont get
updated on that page if you edit the master page
itself. For example, if you change the color of a
master box by overriding it on a document page,
and then you change the color of the master page
box, the box in the document wont change.
For automatic page numbers, create a
box on the master page and choose Type>Insert
Special Character >Auto Page Number.
Working with rules. Select Paragraph rules from
the menu behind the Paragraph window. The
default weight is 1 point, which looks nice on the
screen but generally looks heavy and bland when
you print it. For a clean, slim rule, choose .25 point.
The offset value controls the distance between the
rule and the baseline. A rule will appear after every
hard return (paragraph break). establish rules in
this way rather than drawing them with the
line tool. This allows you to consistently control
their placement and spacing.
Defining new colors. To see pre-defined colors
that you can apply to text, rules, boxes, and so
forth, open the Swatches window. Use the menu
behind the Swatches window to define new colors.
Typography:
The arrangement of text
in space and time.
design basics
Choosing Typefaces
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
38 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 39
Historical Book Faces
Many typefaces were created especially for use in books, including
traditional fonts such as Garamond, Caslon, and Jenson, which are
available today in modern digital versions that have been carefully
designed to refect their historic sources. Books can also be typeset in
sans serif fonts such as Futura and Helvetica.
Contemporary Book Faces
All around the world, graphic designers are developing new fonts and distributing them
online. This book is typeset in two of the fonts displayed below, Dolly and Auto. When
choosing a new typeface, look for the same book-oriented features that you would expect
from a classic font, such as small capitals and non-lining numerals. You can begin to judge
the quality of a typeface by how it is presented on the designers website. Is the font
displayed and described with care? Is it available in a range of weights or styles?
dollys sturdy letters are legible
in small sizes, due to a relatively
low contrast between thick and
thin elements. Ten-point type is
commonly used in books. When Dolly
is applied in larger sizes, more detail
becomes apparent. Dolly consists
of four styles: roman, italic, bold, and
small caps, providing a healthy
palette for solving basic problems of
book typography.
auto is designed with three different
italics, each with its own favor, from
simple and straightforward to curvy
and sweet. Our book uses the Auto 1
italic set, the most neutral of the three
versions. Auto is effective for headlines
as well as text. The typeface features
small caps as well as light, bold, and
black styles.
scala has a classic appearance with
crisp, modern details. The curves are
simple, the italics are elegant, and
the serifs consist of clean, blocky
slabs. The letters have a tall x-height
(the height of the lowercase body),
making them legible at small sizes.
It is available in both serif and sans
serif versions as well as a bold weight.
Dolly, the typeface used for setting the main
text of this book, was designed by Underware, an
independent type foundry and graphic
design studio in the netherlands.
Auto, also designed by Underware, is a sans
serif typeface. Auto is designed in several
weights, which are used in this book for captions,
headings, and other supporting text.
The Scala type family was designed by Martin
Majoor in the Netherlands in 1991. Like many
recent typefaces, Scala is designed in both
serif and sans serif variants.
Garamond is the name for typefaces inspired by
the sixteenth-century printing fonts of Claude
Garamond. Over the centuries, many designers have
created typefaces based on Garamonds types.
adobe Garamond, designed by
Robert Slimbach in 1989, honors the
proportions of its Renaissance source. It
is less explicitly calligraphic than Jenson.
Note the elegant three-dimensional
bowl of the lowercase a and the gap
in the uppercase P. Adobe Garamond
includes small caps as well as bold and
semibold weights; these weights where
not used in the Renaissance. Te italics
are more lyrical than calligraphic.
adobe garamond pro
Dolly
auto
scala
Adobe CAslon was designed by Carol
Twombly in 1990; it includes smAll
CAps as well as bold and semibold
weights; these weights where not used
in the eighteenth century. Te U.S.
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution were frst printed
in Caslons types. Caslon has strong
vertical elements, crisp serifs, and
generous, open italics.
Caslon is named for the British typographer
William Caslon, whose elegant and practical
fonts were an eighteenth-century staple and a fond
personAl fAvorite of benjAmin frAnklin.

adobe caslon pro
Adobe Jenson, designed by Robert
Slimbach in 1995, expresses its
Renaissance roots and yet doesnt feel
mannered or precious. Look for its
calligraphic origins in the ribbonlike
strokes of its letters. Adobe Jenson
includes smAll cAps as well as
light, bold, and semibold weights;
these weights where not used in the
Renaissance. Te italics feel especially
calligraphic.
Jenson is based on typefaces created in the ffteenth
century by the Venetian printer Nicolas Jenson.
Italic typefaces were created by Jensons contemporary
ludovico degli Arrighi.
adobe jenson pro
fontin,beautiful typeface available for free from Jos Buivenga.
Ruud Linssen. Book of War, Mortifcation, and Love. Underware, 2010. Set in Fakir.
design basics
Alignment
36 | Indie Publishing
Typography
Choosing typefaces and arranging them on the pages of your
book are essential steps in creating an inviting and appropriate
atmosphere for your book. Designers today have a wide range of
choices, including historic and contemporary fonts.
Justifed
This is the standard format for large bodies of
text. Justifed text looks neat on the page, and it is
highly economical, because page layout software
uses hyphenation as well as adjusting the spacing
between words and letters in order to ft a maximum
number of words on every line. If your line length
is too short, the hyphenation and spacing will be
choppy and uneven, as seen in newspapers, which
often have large gaps and many hyphenated lines in
a single paragraph. If you are producing your book
with a word-processing program (such as Microsoft
Word) instead of a full-fedged page layout program
(such as InDesign), the justifcation can look
especially bad. (Look at the line above this one.)
Centered
Static and classical, centered text is commonly
used for title pages, chapter headings,
and dedications.
The formal character of centered text also makes it
appropriate for wedding invitations,
tombstones, and the type of verse that appears
inside greeting cards.
When using centered text, the designer usually
breaks lines for sense, putting important words
or phrases on their own lines.
Centered text often has generous line spacing.
Flush left
Setting text with a ragged edge along
the right side of the column became
common in the twentieth century. Flush
left text is considered modern because it
is asymmetrical and organic, allowing the
fow of the language to help determine
the typographic arrangement. Flush left
text works well with narrower columns.
The designer must pay careful attention,
however, to the appearance of the rag, or the
rough edge. The rag should look irregular and
natural; it should not look too fat or even
or form recognizable shapes such as moons,
zigzags, or diving boards.
Flush right
Never say never, but fush right
text is rarely used for setting
the entire text of a book. This
setting can be highly useful,
however, for creating captions,
marginal notes, and other tasty
typographic bits. The even right
edge can be used to create a
sense of affnity or magnetic
attraction between different
elements on the page.
Alignment
Page layout software lets you align text in four basic
ways: justifed, centered, fush left, and fush right.
Most books are set primarily with justifed text
solid blocks that have even edges on both sides. For
a novel, memoir, or other text-heavy work, justifed
text is the most familiar and effcient way to set the
main content. Youll need to explore other forms of
alignment for chapter headings, title pages, cover
typography, and so on. Poetry is usually set fush left,
allowing each line to break naturally as it is written,
rather than being centered or forced into geometric
blocks. Illustrated books are less convention-bound
than text books; experiment with alignment to fnd
what works best with your content and the point of
view you hope to convey.
classic typography
The power of cheese is serious business for the authors
of Sustainable Cuisine White Papers. Designer Kris Kiger has
used a classic typeface to emphasize the gravitas of the
subject matter. The main text block is justifed (traditional),
but the chapter title and author lines are set fush left
(contemporary). The rounded corners and narrow page
format give the book a distinctive feel. Published by Earth
Pledge; distributed by Chelsea Green.
37 Design Basics |
36 | Indie Publishing
Typography
Choosing typefaces and arranging them on the pages of your
book are essential steps in creating an inviting and appropriate
atmosphere for your book. Designers today have a wide range of
choices, including historic and contemporary fonts.
Justifed
This is the standard format for large bodies of
text. Justifed text looks neat on the page, and it is
highly economical, because page layout software
uses hyphenation as well as adjusting the spacing
between words and letters in order to ft a maximum
number of words on every line. If your line length
is too short, the hyphenation and spacing will be
choppy and uneven, as seen in newspapers, which
often have large gaps and many hyphenated lines in
a single paragraph. If you are producing your book
with a word-processing program (such as Microsoft
Word) instead of a full-fedged page layout program
(such as InDesign), the justifcation can look
especially bad. (Look at the line above this one.)
Centered
Static and classical, centered text is commonly
used for title pages, chapter headings,
and dedications.
The formal character of centered text also makes it
appropriate for wedding invitations,
tombstones, and the type of verse that appears
inside greeting cards.
When using centered text, the designer usually
breaks lines for sense, putting important words
or phrases on their own lines.
Centered text often has generous line spacing.
Flush left
Setting text with a ragged edge along
the right side of the column became
common in the twentieth century. Flush
left text is considered modern because it
is asymmetrical and organic, allowing the
fow of the language to help determine
the typographic arrangement. Flush left
text works well with narrower columns.
The designer must pay careful attention,
however, to the appearance of the rag, or the
rough edge. The rag should look irregular and
natural; it should not look too fat or even
or form recognizable shapes such as moons,
zigzags, or diving boards.
Flush right
Never say never, but fush right
text is rarely used for setting
the entire text of a book. This
setting can be highly useful,
however, for creating captions,
marginal notes, and other tasty
typographic bits. The even right
edge can be used to create a
sense of affnity or magnetic
attraction between different
elements on the page.
Alignment
Page layout software lets you align text in four basic
ways: justifed, centered, fush left, and fush right.
Most books are set primarily with justifed text
solid blocks that have even edges on both sides. For
a novel, memoir, or other text-heavy work, justifed
text is the most familiar and effcient way to set the
main content. Youll need to explore other forms of
alignment for chapter headings, title pages, cover
typography, and so on. Poetry is usually set fush left,
allowing each line to break naturally as it is written,
rather than being centered or forced into geometric
blocks. Illustrated books are less convention-bound
than text books; experiment with alignment to fnd
what works best with your content and the point of
view you hope to convey.
classic typography
The power of cheese is serious business for the authors
of Sustainable Cuisine White Papers. Designer Kris Kiger has
used a classic typeface to emphasize the gravitas of the
subject matter. The main text block is justifed (traditional),
but the chapter title and author lines are set fush left
(contemporary). The rounded corners and narrow page
format give the book a distinctive feel. Published by Earth
Pledge; distributed by Chelsea Green.
37 Design Basics |
Design: Charles Nix
Pheasants,
Partridges,
and Grouse;
Buttonquail
Americas pheasants, partri dges, grouse, and ptarmigan
are not generally considered real beauties, being known more as drab brown
game birds. But the main family of these chickenlike birds, Phasianidae, with
a natural Old World distribution, contains some of the globes most visually
striking larger birds, chiefy among the pheasants, like the Silver Pheasant,
Crested Fireback, and Common Peafowl illustrated here. Te most historically
(and gastronomically) signifcant, if usually unheralded, member of the group
is Asias Red Junglefowl, the wild ancestor of domestic chickens.
All chickenlike birds (except buttonquail) are contained in order
Galliformes. In the past, most (excluding the megapodes and curassows)
were included in family Phasianidae, but more recently, the grouse (treated
here), which occur over North America and northern Eurasia, have been
separated into their own family of 18 species, Tetraonidae, and the New
World quail into their own family (treated on p. 87). Phasianidae itself now
contains 155 species, including partridges, francolins, junglefowl, Old World
quail, and pheasants. Several Old World species, such as Chukar, Gray
Partridge, and Ring-necked Pheasant, were introduced to North America
as game birds and are now common here.
Birds in these groups are stocky, with short, broad, rounded wings;
long, heavy toes with claws adapted for ground-scratching; short, thick,
chickenlike bills; and short or long tails, some of the pheasants having tails
to 5 feet (1.5 m) long. Some small quails, such as the Harlequin Quail, are
only about 6 inches (15 cm) long. Many species, particularly among the
pheasants, are exquisitely marked with bright colors and intricate patterns,
pheasants and
partri dges
Distribution:
Old World
No. of Living
Species: 155
No. of Species
Vulnerable,
Endangered: 32, 9
No. of Species Extinct
Since 1600: 3
pheasants, partri dges, and grouse; buttonquai l

83
justified: hella jongerius Book, 2003. Designers: COMA. Photograph: Dan Meyers.
flush left and flush right: vas: an opera in flatland Book spread, 2002. Designer: Stephen Farrell. Author: Steve Tomasula.
design basics
Structure of a Book
half-title page
full title of book,
or just the main title if
there is a lengthy
subtitle
title page
full title of book,
author, and
publisher
copyright page
author, copyright,
year of publication,
isbnnumber,
cataloguing data,
publishers address,
various credits
table of contents
whats in the book
7 6


8
9
front matter
appendices
These might include
glossaries, checklists,
biographies, resumes,
or chronologies.
index
back matter
colophon
Information about
typefaces, book design,
and printing or
binding techniques,
if these
are of interest.
main content

10
11
Page numbers, also called
folios, appear within the
margins of the book.
Left pages are always even;
right pages are always odd.
The front matter gently
introduces the books content
to the reader.
frontispiece
illustration
Some publishers put the copyright
information at the back of the book,
allowing a full double-page spread
for the table ofcontents.
The half-title page is
luxurious, and you
might choose to skip
it in a more utilitarian
volume such as an
instruction manual or
desk calendar.
antatomy of the book
text book
This type of book consists primarily of text, although it
might feature occasional illustrations, such as a frontispiece
at the beginning of the book, small illustrations at the start
of each chapter, or diagrams keyed to the text.
A text book generally consists of one principle column.
The margins can be even all around, or you can create
wider margins at the center (to keep content away from the
binding). Some designers like a wide margin at the bottom,
providing a place for the readers hands to hold the book.

Captions and pictures
on the same page. This is a more
cost-effcient use of space, but
it also means that your pictures
will typically be smaller, to make
room for captions.


picture book
In photo albums and exhibition catalogues, the pictures
dominate. Design your page in relation to the shapes and sizes
of pictures you have and what you want to say about them.
Are your pictures predominantly vertical, horizontal, or
square? Are you presenting images only, or pictures with text?

Left page forcaption;
right page for image.
Clean separation of content
and image.
basic text book
basic picture books
book design basics
Scientifc Advertising
Moore Publishing, 1952
What is Web Design
Roto Vision, 2003
ReadyMade: How to Make Almost Anything
Designed by Eric Heiman, 2005
design basics
Openings
a view of the monuments. Book page, eighteenth
century.
new york times book review. Newspaper page, 2009. Art director:
Nicholas Blechman. Illustrator: Ellen Lupton.
enlarged capitals
Dropped capitals are a traditional page device, especially for opening chapters in a book.
enlarged capitals
a
n enlarged letter cut into the text block is called a
drop capital or drop cap. This example was produced us-
ing the Drop Caps feature in a page layout program. The
software automatically creates a space around one or more charac-
ters and drops them the requested number of lines. Adjusting the
size and tracking of the capital allows it to match the surrounding
text. Similar solutions can be implemented on the web in CSS. The
space around the capital is rectangular, which can be visually awk-
ward, as seen here with the sloping silhouette of the letter A.
as it the best of times, the worst of times, or just
Times New Roman? The drop capital used here (Thesis
Serif Bold) was positioned by hand as a separate element.
A text wrap was applied to an invisible box sitting behind the capital.
Thus the text appears to fow around the intruding right prow of the
W. Likewise, the left prow extends out into the margin, making the
character feel frmly anchored in the text block. Hand-crafted solu-
tions like this one cant be applied systematically.
enlarged capitals
Designers use traditional devices in non-traditional ways.
designers sometimes adapt the drop cap convention
for other purposes. An illustration or icon can appear in
place of a letterform. Purely typographic alternatives are
also possible, such as inserting a title or subtitle into space carved
from the primary text block. Such devices mobilize a familar page
structure for diverse and sometimes unexpected uses.
David Barringer. American Home Life. So New Publishing, 2007.
David Barringer. American Home Life. So New Publishing, 2007.
design basics
Book covers
Cover design:
Patrick Barry
Cover design:
Rymn Massand
Cover design:
Barbara de Wilde
Give readers a place to focus.
This design is weak
because it has no
focal point. The
pictures are all small,
and none of them
seems important.
What if we used this
picture for the whole
cover?
THE WAY
WE LIVE NOW
Designs for Interiors
1950s to the Present
Victoria and Albert Museum
7 november 19784 march
Doesnt it look
better with just
one image?
Designers like to keep
things simple.
Hypothetically, this
cover started like
this...
... but somewhere
along the way, people
kept adding more
information to the
cover.
... and more...
... and more...
...until it turned
into this. Too much
stuff!
If the cover is
designed well, like
this cover...
... it can still look
good with a lot
information.
Cover design:
John Fulbrook III
How to Design and Produce
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
INDIE
PUBLISHING
Cover design:
Kelley McIntyre,
Graphic Design MFA
program, MICA
Perhaps you need a full-color catalog for your first exhibition at a local gallery. Maybe
youre inspired to publish your grandfathers war diaries, or youre obsessed with
documenting every Star Wars action figure ever produced. Indie Publishing presents basic
information about publishing your own book, whether informally for friends or family,
or in a more official way. If a wonderful old building in your neighborhood is about to be
torn down, a short history of the site could help save it. If you work with kids after school,
a book of their poetry could show the world what theyve achieved. If youve written a
steamy novel that publishers keep turning down, now is the time to publish it yourself.
This practical guide is directed at people from all walks of life who want
to create and distribute their own content, from personal projects that
use traditional bookmaking techniques to larger endeavors employing
industrial printing methods. The authors address the business aspects of
independent publishing, from how to get an ISBN (and why you might need
one) to using online distribution services and print-on-demand technologies.
They also explore visual design principles, taking the reader step-by-step
through the process of planning and producing a book that feels personal or
professional, funky or fastidious.
This focus on design sets Indie Publishing apart from other publish-it-yourself manuals.
Packed with full-color illustrations, this visually driven book presents examples of
independently produced poetry, fiction, picture books, artists portfolios, exhibition
catalogs, and more. The book explores basic design principles such as scale, pacing, and
typography, along with commentary on how to create effective and intriguing book covers,
title pages, and layouts. A variety of bookmaking techniques and processes are explained.
Indie Publishing shows readers a range of marketing materials, and it concludes with a
portfolio of exciting examples of independent publishing at work.
design briefs
essential texts on design
Also available in this series
D.I.Y. Design It Yourself, Ellen Lupton, ed., 978-1-56898-552-7
Elements of Design, Gail Greet Hannah, 978-1-56898-329-5
Geometry of Design, Kimberly Elam, 978-1-56898-249-6
Grid Systems, Kimberly Elam, 978-1-56898-465-0
Thinking with Type, Ellen Lupton, 978-1-56898-448-3
Typographic Systems, Kimberly Elam, 978-1-56898-687-6
Visual Grammar, Christian LeBorg, 978-1-56898-581-7
Princeton Architectural Press
www.papress.com
ISBN 978-1-56898-760-6 $21.95
I
N
D
I
E

P
U
B
L
I
S
H
I
N
G
:

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,

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d
.
DESI GN BRI EFS
This is how the cover
looks without the text.
Although this cover
has a lot images, they
frame a big open space
for the title.
How to Design and Produce
Your Own Book edited by Ellen Lupton
INDIE
PUBLISHING
Perhaps you need a full-color catalog for your first exhibition at a local gallery. Maybe
youre inspired to publish your grandfathers war diaries, or youre obsessed with
documenting every Star Wars action figure ever produced. Indie Publishing presents basic
information about publishing your own book, whether informally for friends or family,
or in a more official way. If a wonderful old building in your neighborhood is about to be
torn down, a short history of the site could help save it. If you work with kids after school,
a book of their poetry could show the world what theyve achieved. If youve written a
steamy novel that publishers keep turning down, now is the time to publish it yourself.
This practical guide is directed at people from all walks of life who want
to create and distribute their own content, from personal projects that
use traditional bookmaking techniques to larger endeavors employing
industrial printing methods. The authors address the business aspects of
independent publishing, from how to get an ISBN (and why you might need
one) to using online distribution services and print-on-demand technologies.
They also explore visual design principles, taking the reader step-by-step
through the process of planning and producing a book that feels personal or
professional, funky or fastidious.
This focus on design sets Indie Publishing apart from other publish-it-yourself manuals.
Packed with full-color illustrations, this visually driven book presents examples of
independently produced poetry, fiction, picture books, artists portfolios, exhibition
catalogs, and more. The book explores basic design principles such as scale, pacing, and
typography, along with commentary on how to create effective and intriguing book covers,
title pages, and layouts. A variety of bookmaking techniques and processes are explained.
Indie Publishing shows readers a range of marketing materials, and it concludes with a
portfolio of exciting examples of independent publishing at work.
design briefs
essential texts on design
Also available in this series
D.I.Y. Design It Yourself, Ellen Lupton, ed., 978-1-56898-552-7
Elements of Design, Gail Greet Hannah, 978-1-56898-329-5
Geometry of Design, Kimberly Elam, 978-1-56898-249-6
Grid Systems, Kimberly Elam, 978-1-56898-465-0
Thinking with Type, Ellen Lupton, 978-1-56898-448-3
Typographic Systems, Kimberly Elam, 978-1-56898-687-6
Visual Grammar, Christian LeBorg, 978-1-56898-581-7
Princeton Architectural Press
www.papress.com
ISBN 978-1-56898-760-6 $21.95
I
N
D
I
E

P
U
B
L
I
S
H
I
N
G
:

H
o
w

t
o

D
e
s
i
g
n

a
n
d

P
r
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d
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c
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Y
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B
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n

L
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p
t
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,

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d
.
DESI GN BRI EFS
When the back-
ground is white, the
images are distract-
ing because they
stand out too much.
How to Design and Produce
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
INDIE
PUBLISHING
The brown back-
ground tones down
images and softens
the cover.
Be inspired by techniques.
Technique: Original photography.
Must be hi-resolution (at least 300
dpi at 8.5 x 11 inches).
Tony Venne
Joo Ha
Danielle Davis
Design by Ryan Clifford; illustration by Tricia Chin
Ryan Clifford
Lindsey M. Muir
Kristian Bjrnard
John Corrigan
Helen Armstrong
42 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 43
Cover Design
If your book is for sale, the cover is an
essential marketing device that will function
like a logo and advertisement. It must look
great in the bookstore and on the shelf. It also
has to look good when its a tiny digital image
on Amazon and other online sites.
Design Process
1. defne the problem
Write a description of what you want to say and to whom
you want to say it. Whats the main point of your book?
What attitude do you want to express (formal, relaxed,
professional, raw)? Who is your audience (friends, enemies,
peers, potential employers)? Keep these goals in mind
when you develop design ideas.
2. research
Look at other books similar to yours. Think about what
attracts you and note the variety of design strategies.
Some covers are all type; others feature photographs and
illustrations. Some are quiet; some are loud.
3. Brainstorm
Write down as many ideas as you can think ofgood, bad,
and ridiculous.
4. prioritize
Which ideas make sense with your book? Which ones are
feasible for you to produce? Study your available resources,
such as vintage photos or illustrations from inside the
book.
5. try it
If your design skills are weak, collaborate with a designer,
artist, illustrator, or photographer. Look for stock images
and pictures on photo sharing sites. Always respect
copyrights, and keep in mind that photographs must be
high-resolution and large scale to reproduce well.
6. test it
Show your designs to other people for reactions. Evaluate
each design. Is the title easy to read? Do the images bring
attention to the title, or do they distract from it? Is there
a clear hierarchy of elements? Is the design conveying the
intended message and tone of voice?
*/%*&
16#-*4)*/(
How to Design and Publish
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
many variations
Shown above is an early version of
the cover that was fnally chosen for
this book. Designer Kelley McIntyre
tried numerous color variations
before fnalizing the cover. This
early design did not feel rich and
vibrant enough. The fnal cover uses
a background texture and more
assertive colors.
trial and error
A team of designers worked together
to create numerous alternate
covers for Indie Publishing. Some
solutions are photographic; others
use illustrations; some are purely
typographic. As the team worked,
they focused on their message,
choosing a fnal design that speaks
about the active, hands-on process
of making a book.
Cover Gallery
Tony Venne
Joo Ha
Danielle Davis
Design by Ryan Clifford; illustration by Tricia Chin
Ryan Clifford
Lindsey M. Muir
Kristian Bjrnard
John Corrigan
Helen Armstrong
42 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 43
Cover Design
If your book is for sale, the cover is an
essential marketing device that will function
like a logo and advertisement. It must look
great in the bookstore and on the shelf. It also
has to look good when its a tiny digital image
on Amazon and other online sites.
Design Process
1. defne the problem
Write a description of what you want to say and to whom
you want to say it. Whats the main point of your book?
What attitude do you want to express (formal, relaxed,
professional, raw)? Who is your audience (friends, enemies,
peers, potential employers)? Keep these goals in mind
when you develop design ideas.
2. research
Look at other books similar to yours. Think about what
attracts you and note the variety of design strategies.
Some covers are all type; others feature photographs and
illustrations. Some are quiet; some are loud.
3. Brainstorm
Write down as many ideas as you can think ofgood, bad,
and ridiculous.
4. prioritize
Which ideas make sense with your book? Which ones are
feasible for you to produce? Study your available resources,
such as vintage photos or illustrations from inside the
book.
5. try it
If your design skills are weak, collaborate with a designer,
artist, illustrator, or photographer. Look for stock images
and pictures on photo sharing sites. Always respect
copyrights, and keep in mind that photographs must be
high-resolution and large scale to reproduce well.
6. test it
Show your designs to other people for reactions. Evaluate
each design. Is the title easy to read? Do the images bring
attention to the title, or do they distract from it? Is there
a clear hierarchy of elements? Is the design conveying the
intended message and tone of voice?
*/%*&
16#-*4)*/(
How to Design and Publish
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
many variations
Shown above is an early version of
the cover that was fnally chosen for
this book. Designer Kelley McIntyre
tried numerous color variations
before fnalizing the cover. This
early design did not feel rich and
vibrant enough. The fnal cover uses
a background texture and more
assertive colors.
trial and error
A team of designers worked together
to create numerous alternate
covers for Indie Publishing. Some
solutions are photographic; others
use illustrations; some are purely
typographic. As the team worked,
they focused on their message,
choosing a fnal design that speaks
about the active, hands-on process
of making a book.
Cover Gallery
This beautiful cover
uses a photograph.
Tony Venne
Joo Ha
Danielle Davis
Design by Ryan Clifford; illustration by Tricia Chin
Ryan Clifford
Lindsey M. Muir
Kristian Bjrnard
John Corrigan
Helen Armstrong
42 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 43
Cover Design
If your book is for sale, the cover is an
essential marketing device that will function
like a logo and advertisement. It must look
great in the bookstore and on the shelf. It also
has to look good when its a tiny digital image
on Amazon and other online sites.
Design Process
1. defne the problem
Write a description of what you want to say and to whom
you want to say it. Whats the main point of your book?
What attitude do you want to express (formal, relaxed,
professional, raw)? Who is your audience (friends, enemies,
peers, potential employers)? Keep these goals in mind
when you develop design ideas.
2. research
Look at other books similar to yours. Think about what
attracts you and note the variety of design strategies.
Some covers are all type; others feature photographs and
illustrations. Some are quiet; some are loud.
3. Brainstorm
Write down as many ideas as you can think ofgood, bad,
and ridiculous.
4. prioritize
Which ideas make sense with your book? Which ones are
feasible for you to produce? Study your available resources,
such as vintage photos or illustrations from inside the
book.
5. try it
If your design skills are weak, collaborate with a designer,
artist, illustrator, or photographer. Look for stock images
and pictures on photo sharing sites. Always respect
copyrights, and keep in mind that photographs must be
high-resolution and large scale to reproduce well.
6. test it
Show your designs to other people for reactions. Evaluate
each design. Is the title easy to read? Do the images bring
attention to the title, or do they distract from it? Is there
a clear hierarchy of elements? Is the design conveying the
intended message and tone of voice?
*/%*&
16#-*4)*/(
How to Design and Publish
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
many variations
Shown above is an early version of
the cover that was fnally chosen for
this book. Designer Kelley McIntyre
tried numerous color variations
before fnalizing the cover. This
early design did not feel rich and
vibrant enough. The fnal cover uses
a background texture and more
assertive colors.
trial and error
A team of designers worked together
to create numerous alternate
covers for Indie Publishing. Some
solutions are photographic; others
use illustrations; some are purely
typographic. As the team worked,
they focused on their message,
choosing a fnal design that speaks
about the active, hands-on process
of making a book.
Cover Gallery
Technique: Digital montage.
Again, all sources must be original
and hi-resolution.
Tony Venne
Joo Ha
Danielle Davis
Design by Ryan Clifford; illustration by Tricia Chin
Ryan Clifford
Lindsey M. Muir
Kristian Bjrnard
John Corrigan
Helen Armstrong
42 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 43
Cover Design
If your book is for sale, the cover is an
essential marketing device that will function
like a logo and advertisement. It must look
great in the bookstore and on the shelf. It also
has to look good when its a tiny digital image
on Amazon and other online sites.
Design Process
1. defne the problem
Write a description of what you want to say and to whom
you want to say it. Whats the main point of your book?
What attitude do you want to express (formal, relaxed,
professional, raw)? Who is your audience (friends, enemies,
peers, potential employers)? Keep these goals in mind
when you develop design ideas.
2. research
Look at other books similar to yours. Think about what
attracts you and note the variety of design strategies.
Some covers are all type; others feature photographs and
illustrations. Some are quiet; some are loud.
3. Brainstorm
Write down as many ideas as you can think ofgood, bad,
and ridiculous.
4. prioritize
Which ideas make sense with your book? Which ones are
feasible for you to produce? Study your available resources,
such as vintage photos or illustrations from inside the
book.
5. try it
If your design skills are weak, collaborate with a designer,
artist, illustrator, or photographer. Look for stock images
and pictures on photo sharing sites. Always respect
copyrights, and keep in mind that photographs must be
high-resolution and large scale to reproduce well.
6. test it
Show your designs to other people for reactions. Evaluate
each design. Is the title easy to read? Do the images bring
attention to the title, or do they distract from it? Is there
a clear hierarchy of elements? Is the design conveying the
intended message and tone of voice?
*/%*&
16#-*4)*/(
How to Design and Publish
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
many variations
Shown above is an early version of
the cover that was fnally chosen for
this book. Designer Kelley McIntyre
tried numerous color variations
before fnalizing the cover. This
early design did not feel rich and
vibrant enough. The fnal cover uses
a background texture and more
assertive colors.
trial and error
A team of designers worked together
to create numerous alternate
covers for Indie Publishing. Some
solutions are photographic; others
use illustrations; some are purely
typographic. As the team worked,
they focused on their message,
choosing a fnal design that speaks
about the active, hands-on process
of making a book.
Cover Gallery
Tony Venne
Joo Ha
Danielle Davis
Design by Ryan Clifford; illustration by Tricia Chin
Ryan Clifford
Lindsey M. Muir
Kristian Bjrnard
John Corrigan
Helen Armstrong
42 | Indie Publishing Design Basics | 43
Cover Design
If your book is for sale, the cover is an
essential marketing device that will function
like a logo and advertisement. It must look
great in the bookstore and on the shelf. It also
has to look good when its a tiny digital image
on Amazon and other online sites.
Design Process
1. defne the problem
Write a description of what you want to say and to whom
you want to say it. Whats the main point of your book?
What attitude do you want to express (formal, relaxed,
professional, raw)? Who is your audience (friends, enemies,
peers, potential employers)? Keep these goals in mind
when you develop design ideas.
2. research
Look at other books similar to yours. Think about what
attracts you and note the variety of design strategies.
Some covers are all type; others feature photographs and
illustrations. Some are quiet; some are loud.
3. Brainstorm
Write down as many ideas as you can think ofgood, bad,
and ridiculous.
4. prioritize
Which ideas make sense with your book? Which ones are
feasible for you to produce? Study your available resources,
such as vintage photos or illustrations from inside the
book.
5. try it
If your design skills are weak, collaborate with a designer,
artist, illustrator, or photographer. Look for stock images
and pictures on photo sharing sites. Always respect
copyrights, and keep in mind that photographs must be
high-resolution and large scale to reproduce well.
6. test it
Show your designs to other people for reactions. Evaluate
each design. Is the title easy to read? Do the images bring
attention to the title, or do they distract from it? Is there
a clear hierarchy of elements? Is the design conveying the
intended message and tone of voice?
*/%*&
16#-*4)*/(
How to Design and Publish
Your Own Book
edited by Ellen Lupton
many variations
Shown above is an early version of
the cover that was fnally chosen for
this book. Designer Kelley McIntyre
tried numerous color variations
before fnalizing the cover. This
early design did not feel rich and
vibrant enough. The fnal cover uses
a background texture and more
assertive colors.
trial and error
A team of designers worked together
to create numerous alternate
covers for Indie Publishing. Some
solutions are photographic; others
use illustrations; some are purely
typographic. As the team worked,
they focused on their message,
choosing a fnal design that speaks
about the active, hands-on process
of making a book.
Cover Gallery
Technique: Vector-based illustrations (such
as Adobe Illustrator). These are resolution-
independent, so they can be blown up to any
size. Vector images make good covers.
Technique:
Hand-painted
illustration.
Design: Maira
Kalman
the making of a book
Sexy Librarian
by Kristian Bjornard and Ellen Lupton
Legions of aspiring novelists have manuscripts
they long to share with the world. In the main
stream book industry, most editors will only
look at submissions that come recommended by
a literary agent, and few agents are willing to
waste their time and risk their reputations on
unknown writers. Unsolicited manuscripts are
sent to the slush pile, a dumping ground
occasionally sifted through by lowlevel editorial
staff. If you dont want the slush pile to be the
fnal resting place for your novel, consider
publishing it yourself.
The novel showcased in this chapter was written by Julia
Weist, a young artist and writer. Called Sexy Librarian, this is her
first novel, and it was published using Lulu.coms printon
demand service. This system allows books to be digitally
printed and shipped to customers onebyone each time the
book is ordered. Customers can order the book directly from
Lulu, or, with the purchase of an ISBN package, the book can
be offered via Amazon and other online booksellers. The unit
cost for P.O.D is higher than that for massproduction, but it
costs very little to get started. Your big investment will be in
writing, editing, designing, and marketing your booklabors
of love that cost more time than money.
FICTION
Ellen saw the show and told me to fnish the
manuscript and let her publish it. I said hell no,
I dont want people asking me about the clap
all the time. Julia Weist, interview in Sadie Magazine.
1. Write your book. Whew! That
was easy.
2. Choose a P.O.D. service. Various
services can provide you with a digital
printing, online distribution, and ISBN
package. (Some will also design and
edit the book for you, for additional
fees.) We researched various
companies before choosing Lulu.com,
a consumer-friendly service that
welcomes newcomers and provides
excellent support along the way. It
costs nothing to upload print-ready
digital files; a low fee gets you an
official ISBN as well as a listing that is
shared with the major internet
booksellers, including Amazon,
Borders, and Barnes & Noble. Books
are printed and delivered by Lulu one-
by-one as customers purchase them.
You set a price that includes a royalty
on top of Lulus production fee.
3. Choose a format. Your books
trim size or format will affect the page
count as well as how the volume feels
in peoples hands. Maybe you want a
smaller book with many pages, or a
bigger book with a thinner spine.
P.O.D. services are set up to produce
books in a fixed number of formats as
well as in hardback and paperback.
Only a few trim sizes may be approved
for distribution to bookstores, so
choose carefully. Sexy Librarian is a
6-x-9-inch paperback. This size, which
is larger and more elegant than a
supermarket novel, gives the book the
look and feel of quality fiction.
4. Edit your book. Every author
needs an editor. If you cant afford to
pay someone, find a fellow writer to
help you out, someone with a firm
grasp of grammar who will have the
time and courage to read your novel
carefully and look for errors,
inconsistencies, plot glitches, and
more. If you cant afford to pay this
person, offer babysitting, dogwalking,
housekeeping, or other services in
exchange. Do what you have to do;
debase yourself if necessary.
5. Design your book. Most P.O.D.
services work with PDF files, a
standard document format that is
generated with Adobe Acrobat
Professional software. This software
works with the Adobe page layout
program InDesign, but it also works
with MS Word, Quark, and other
publishing tools. You will need some
software skills to produce your novel.
The services of a professional graphic
designer would be a big help, too; try
to find one. If you cant, follow our
guidelines on the following pages and
keep your design as simple as
possible.
6. Design the cover. A great cover
is a great sales tool. If you have a
design budget, heres another place to
spend it. (It turns out that many
successful indie publishers happen to
be married to graphic designers. Try
that route, too, if you have the heart.)
7. Order a proof. Read it carefully.
Make corrections. Repeat. We cant
stress enough the importance of the
proofing process. Even if you edited
your book carefully at the manuscript
stage, you will find new and different
errors when the pages have been
typeset. Once you officially publish
your book online (with that real
ISBN), you are locked into the final
product, and any changes you make
will cost money.
8. Order another proof. Now is
not the time to rush. In the
mainstream publishing world, books
go through many rounds of edits, and
your book deserves the same care and
attention. Proof your books as many
times as you need to to get it right.
9. Publish your book. When youre
ready, really ready, hit the approve
button and publish your book. Thats
it. Its real now.
10. Market your book. Make a web
site. Have parties. Send out review
copies. Call up local bookstores.
Arrange readings at bars, libraries,
community centers, gas stations
anywhere you can find an audience.
No one will find your book unless you
tell them about it. Even a book
produced by a mainstream publisher
depends on endless love and energy
from its author to get the word out.
Love your book, and do not let it die.
create a print-on-demand book in ten painstaking,
assbreaking, mindnumbing, and totally essential steps
Follow the steps below to publish any kind of P.O.D. publication
fction, nonfction poetry, exhibition catalogs, and more.
the proof is in the pudding
We ordered five waves of proofs
from Lulu.com before publishing
the final version. We focused on the
text during first two rounds, and we
concentrated on the cover in the
final rounds, honing the concept
and tweaking the photography. The
editor, designer, and author played
a role at every stage. Photos by Dan
Meyers.
| Indie Publishing 8 Design Your Own Fiction Book | 9
For a moment, she was struck by the thought that this was a pretty romantic
thing to say. She tried to sober herself quickly, desperately trying to keep the
impractical reality of their relationship in the foreground of her thoughts. Perhaps,
she reasoned, their attraction arose from the forbidden nature of even the proximity
of their houses. Or maybe from the common intimacy of their simultaneously
burning kitchen lights, vigilant together as one dim glow in the night. But of course
she knew there were other grounds and that they were a good match. They were
comfortable together, they could talk theory with the ease of grad students, and, as
Joe explained, they valued the same virtuesboth creative and regulatory.
You are like this building that I want to design that is so labyrinthine that even
when you reenter a room youve been in before, not only do you have the feeling
that youve never stood there prior, but also everything you understood about where
you had just been has shifted. And right now, Audrey, his voice was cracking a
little, and she noticed that he kept using her name, right now I am outside, walking
around and around the foundation looking into the windows like a crazy man. I
keep imagining this idea of learning by being in the same place forever, but you
cant understand it without being there.
That sounds like the library, Joe. Audreys tone was even and she continued
very slowly with, And even though you are always walking around my house,
because you are my neighbor, that is one of the most romantic and appropriate
metaphors I have ever heard. I could think about it for days and still feel affected.
But Joe, as much as I appreciate your honesty, I wonder how productive it is. Do you
have any idea about what we are supposed to do with each other? Audreys level-
headedness was suddenly regenerating from the old self-protectiveness that that was
threatening to return full force. It was right there, icy and ready, offering to diffuse
the intimidation of massive frustration and hurt that was riding on Joes answer.
He didnt reply, but it looked like he was trying to swallow a squirrel. He stood
and moved to her so quickly, she almost didnt register any time passing between
the squirrel-swallowing and their rst kiss. For a moment she was so startled she half
expected to taste fur and nuts. Instead, she was enveloped in a heatsoft, sweet,
and second-nature. After an eternity they broke from each other, wrote novels in
the span of a stare, and then Joe left, quickly and quietly.
For several moments after he had gone, she sat motionless in the same position,
realizing she was shaking slightly. Touching her slim legs to ground herself, Audrey
discovered the vibrations were not in fact coming from aftershock. Her cell phone
was vibrating in her pocket. It was Adam. It was Wednesday. She threw the phone
into the couch, turned off all the lights in the kitchen, and got into bed.
She dreamt tfully and awoke with resolve. Today, Audrey decided, she was
going to play hooky from work, get in the car, and explore. Save for South Dakota,
she had taken no care to utilize the proximity of Minnesota to so many states shed
never been to. This July Thursday could be used to survey new territory and foreign
peoples. The plan was to just start driving and see where she would end up.
The good thing about being friends with Victoria was that Audrey knew it
wouldnt be a problem to take a few days off if she used the excuse that some
emotional blimp was carrying her eastward and that she needed to drag for a while
before guring out how to cut herself from its binds. The problem was, though, that
Midwestern women seemed to love to be sandbags that attach themselves to hot air
crafts, slowing down feelings with their weight but also enjoying the view. Audrey
told Victoria that Jacob had called her from New York, having gotten busted and
busted up for slinging, and she needed to take some time to disassociate. Victoria
was very concerned, and all Audrey could do was wonder how Joe had proposed
to her. What kind of building was Victoria? Audrey had been trying so intensely to
compartmentalize the ex-husband and ex-wife that even the thought of them even
knowing each other was a bit startling. By the time she returned, perhaps she would
have the courage to nally broach the subject.
The little Neon was meant to go east. There was something almost sexually
exciting about the possibility that she could wind up in New York if she didnt stop
driving in that direction. The potential was similar to her situation with Joe, or the
realization that one holds oneself back all the time from yelling out in a crowd.
She likened it also to automated breathing, a mechanism that disappears when
you become conscious of it, and Audrey suddenly couldnt remember a time when
getting on I-90 and heading straight for New York wasnt an option.
The windows were down and she was cruising, driving so fast, in fact, that
it seemed like the sounds of the radio were coming from behind her, trying to
catch up to the car and the ends of her hair whipping at everything it could reach.
Suddenly, a Hall and Oates song came on. Thank God, she thought. The sleazy,
80s-movie-sound-track quality of the jam, in the novel context of a free woman road
tripping, was enough to jog another memory. This was just what Audrey needed, a
recollection so supercial, anecdotal, and hip that it brought back the time before
she had assigned herself the task of becoming Emotional.
It was summer and she was youngor at least younger than 25and she was
interviewing for a cushy but uninspiring studio assistant position helping one of
Petzels abstract painters. The guy who let her into the interview whispered, I know
you, in Audreys ear, although she knew he didnt, which later she found out he
did, which ultimately didnt matter because they were clearly going to sleep together
anyway. And she was smiling now, remembering the scene.
Bruce, as he was called, tread that precarious line that hipsters know too well,
between looking cool and looking like a pedophile with multiple convictions
sexy librarian julia weist 82 83
Page Layout
A typical mass-market paperback has as much text as possible shoveled onto
every page. More luxurious editions use more white space (yielding a higher
page count and a higher price for printing, paper, and binding). Designer
Kristian Bjrnard tested several layouts for Sexy Librarian before choosing one
that felt just right.
deluxe layout
The text block in this format follows
the ratio of the Golden Section (1 :
1.618 or a : b = b (a + b). Architects,
painters, and book designers
have used this classical system of
proportion for hundreds of years.
Although the layout shown here
may have worked well for a treatise
on wine tasting or coin collecting,
it seemed too pretentious and
grandiose for Sexy Librarian.
Drab layout
This plain-vanilla design features
narrow margins, which save space.
But since Sexy Librarian is a fairly short
novel, we actually wanted to beef
up the page count; more generously
designed layouts would yield a heftier
book in the end. Making any book
format symmetrical (with margins
mirroring each other from left to
right) prevents the block of text from
showing through on the other side.
each other? Audreys level-headedness was suddenly regenerating
from the old self-protectiveness that that was threatening to return
full force. It was right there, icy and ready, offering to diffuse the
intimidation of massive frustration and hurt that was riding on
Joes answer.
He didnt reply, but it looked like he was trying to swallow a
squirrel. He stood and moved to her so quickly, she almost didnt
register any time passing between the squirrel-swallowing and
their rst kiss. For a moment she was so startled she half expected
to taste fur and nuts. Instead, she was enveloped in a heatsoft,
sweet, and second-nature. After an eternity they broke from each
other, wrote novels in the span of a stare, and then Joe left, quickly
and quietly.
For several moments after he had gone, she sat motionless in
the same position, realizing she was shaking slightly. Touching her
slim legs to ground herself, Audrey discovered the vibrations were
not in fact coming from aftershock. Her cell phone was vibrating
in her pocket. It was Adam. It was Wednesday. She threw the
phone into the couch, turned off all the lights in the kitchen, and
got into bed.
She dreamt tfully and awoke with resolve. Today, Audrey
decided, she was going to play hooky from work, get in the car,
and explore. Save for South Dakota, she had taken no care to
utilize the proximity of Minnesota to so many states shed never
been to. This July Thursday could be used to survey new territory
and foreign peoples. The plan was to just start driving and see
where she would end up.
The good thing about being friends with Victoria was that
Audrey knew it wouldnt be a problem to take a few days off if
For a moment, she was struck by the thought that this
was a pretty romantic thing to say. She tried to sober herself
quickly, desperately trying to keep the impractical reality of
their relationship in the foreground of her thoughts. Perhaps,
she reasoned, their attraction arose from the forbidden nature of
even the proximity of their houses. Or maybe from the common
intimacy of their simultaneously burning kitchen lights, vigilant
together as one dim glow in the night. But of course she knew
there were other grounds and that they were a good match. They
were comfortable together, they could talk theory with the ease
of grad students, and, as Joe explained, they valued the same
virtuesboth creative and regulatory.
You are like this building that I want to design that is so
labyrinthine that even when you reenter a room youve been in
before, not only do you have the feeling that youve never stood
there prior, but also everything you understood about where
you had just been has shifted. And right now, Audrey, his voice
was cracking a little, and she noticed that he kept using her
name, right now I am outside, walking around and around the
foundation looking into the windows like a crazy man. I keep
imagining this idea of learning by being in the same place forever,
but you cant understand it without being there.
That sounds like the library, Joe. Audreys tone was even and
she continued very slowly with, And even though you are always
walking around my house, because you are my neighbor, that is
one of the most romantic and appropriate metaphors I have ever
heard. I could think about it for days and still feel affected. But Joe,
as much as I appreciate your honesty, I wonder how productive it
is. Do you have any idea about what we are supposed to do with
chapter 7 chapter 7 2 3
j uli a wei st sex y li brari an
| Indie Publishing 54
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 54 6/16/08 9:04:11 AM
For a moment, she was struck by the thought that this was a pretty romantic
thing to say. She tried to sober herself quickly, desperately trying to keep the
impractical reality of their relationship in the foreground of her thoughts. Perhaps,
she reasoned, their attraction arose from the forbidden nature of even the proximity
of their houses. Or maybe from the common intimacy of their simultaneously
burning kitchen lights, vigilant together as one dim glow in the night. But of course
she knew there were other grounds and that they were a good match. They were
comfortable together, they could talk theory with the ease of grad students, and, as
Joe explained, they valued the same virtuesboth creative and regulatory.
You are like this building that I want to design that is so labyrinthine that even
when you reenter a room youve been in before, not only do you have the feeling
that youve never stood there prior, but also everything you understood about where
you had just been has shifted. And right now, Audrey, his voice was cracking a
little, and she noticed that he kept using her name, right now I am outside, walking
around and around the foundation looking into the windows like a crazy man. I
keep imagining this idea of learning by being in the same place forever, but you
cant understand it without being there.
That sounds like the library, Joe. Audreys tone was even and she continued
very slowly with, And even though you are always walking around my house,
because you are my neighbor, that is one of the most romantic and appropriate
metaphors I have ever heard. I could think about it for days and still feel affected.
But Joe, as much as I appreciate your honesty, I wonder how productive it is. Do you
have any idea about what we are supposed to do with each other? Audreys level-
headedness was suddenly regenerating from the old self-protectiveness that that was
threatening to return full force. It was right there, icy and ready, offering to diffuse
the intimidation of massive frustration and hurt that was riding on Joes answer.
He didnt reply, but it looked like he was trying to swallow a squirrel. He stood
and moved to her so quickly, she almost didnt register any time passing between
the squirrel-swallowing and their rst kiss. For a moment she was so startled she half
expected to taste fur and nuts. Instead, she was enveloped in a heatsoft, sweet,
and second-nature. After an eternity they broke from each other, wrote novels in
the span of a stare, and then Joe left, quickly and quietly.
For several moments after he had gone, she sat motionless in the same position,
realizing she was shaking slightly. Touching her slim legs to ground herself, Audrey
discovered the vibrations were not in fact coming from aftershock. Her cell phone
was vibrating in her pocket. It was Adam. It was Wednesday. She threw the phone
into the couch, turned off all the lights in the kitchen, and got into bed.
She dreamt tfully and awoke with resolve. Today, Audrey decided, she was
going to play hooky from work, get in the car, and explore. Save for South Dakota,
she had taken no care to utilize the proximity of Minnesota to so many states shed
never been to. This July Thursday could be used to survey new territory and foreign
peoples. The plan was to just start driving and see where she would end up.
The good thing about being friends with Victoria was that Audrey knew it
wouldnt be a problem to take a few days off if she used the excuse that some
emotional blimp was carrying her eastward and that she needed to drag for a while
before guring out how to cut herself from its binds. The problem was, though, that
Midwestern women seemed to love to be sandbags that attach themselves to hot air
crafts, slowing down feelings with their weight but also enjoying the view. Audrey
told Victoria that Jacob had called her from New York, having gotten busted and
busted up for slinging, and she needed to take some time to disassociate. Victoria
was very concerned, and all Audrey could do was wonder how Joe had proposed
to her. What kind of building was Victoria? Audrey had been trying so intensely to
compartmentalize the ex-husband and ex-wife that even the thought of them even
knowing each other was a bit startling. By the time she returned, perhaps she would
have the courage to nally broach the subject.
The little Neon was meant to go east. There was something almost sexually
exciting about the possibility that she could wind up in New York if she didnt stop
driving in that direction. The potential was similar to her situation with Joe, or the
realization that one holds oneself back all the time from yelling out in a crowd.
She likened it also to automated breathing, a mechanism that disappears when
you become conscious of it, and Audrey suddenly couldnt remember a time when
getting on I-90 and heading straight for New York wasnt an option.
The windows were down and she was cruising, driving so fast, in fact, that
it seemed like the sounds of the radio were coming from behind her, trying to
catch up to the car and the ends of her hair whipping at everything it could reach.
Suddenly, a Hall and Oates song came on. Thank God, she thought. The sleazy,
80s-movie-sound-track quality of the jam, in the novel context of a free woman road
tripping, was enough to jog another memory. This was just what Audrey needed, a
recollection so supercial, anecdotal, and hip that it brought back the time before
she had assigned herself the task of becoming Emotional.
It was summer and she was youngor at least younger than 25and she was
interviewing for a cushy but uninspiring studio assistant position helping one of
Petzels abstract painters. The guy who let her into the interview whispered, I know
you, in Audreys ear, although she knew he didnt, which later she found out he
did, which ultimately didnt matter because they were clearly going to sleep together
anyway. And she was smiling now, remembering the scene.
Bruce, as he was called, tread that precarious line that hipsters know too well,
between looking cool and looking like a pedophile with multiple convictions
sexy librarian julia weist 82 83
Page Layout
A typical mass-market paperback has as much text as possible shoveled onto
every page. More luxurious editions use more white space (yielding a higher
page count and a higher price for printing, paper, and binding). Designer
Kristian Bjrnard tested several layouts for Sexy Librarian before choosing one
that felt just right.
deluxe layout
The text block in this format follows
the ratio of the Golden Section (1 :
1.618 or a : b = b (a + b). Architects,
painters, and book designers
have used this classical system of
proportion for hundreds of years.
Although the layout shown here
may have worked well for a treatise
on wine tasting or coin collecting,
it seemed too pretentious and
grandiose for Sexy Librarian.
Drab layout
This plain-vanilla design features
narrow margins, which save space.
But since Sexy Librarian is a fairly short
novel, we actually wanted to beef
up the page count; more generously
designed layouts would yield a heftier
book in the end. Making any book
format symmetrical (with margins
mirroring each other from left to
right) prevents the block of text from
showing through on the other side.
each other? Audreys level-headedness was suddenly regenerating
from the old self-protectiveness that that was threatening to return
full force. It was right there, icy and ready, offering to diffuse the
intimidation of massive frustration and hurt that was riding on
Joes answer.
He didnt reply, but it looked like he was trying to swallow a
squirrel. He stood and moved to her so quickly, she almost didnt
register any time passing between the squirrel-swallowing and
their rst kiss. For a moment she was so startled she half expected
to taste fur and nuts. Instead, she was enveloped in a heatsoft,
sweet, and second-nature. After an eternity they broke from each
other, wrote novels in the span of a stare, and then Joe left, quickly
and quietly.
For several moments after he had gone, she sat motionless in
the same position, realizing she was shaking slightly. Touching her
slim legs to ground herself, Audrey discovered the vibrations were
not in fact coming from aftershock. Her cell phone was vibrating
in her pocket. It was Adam. It was Wednesday. She threw the
phone into the couch, turned off all the lights in the kitchen, and
got into bed.
She dreamt tfully and awoke with resolve. Today, Audrey
decided, she was going to play hooky from work, get in the car,
and explore. Save for South Dakota, she had taken no care to
utilize the proximity of Minnesota to so many states shed never
been to. This July Thursday could be used to survey new territory
and foreign peoples. The plan was to just start driving and see
where she would end up.
The good thing about being friends with Victoria was that
Audrey knew it wouldnt be a problem to take a few days off if
For a moment, she was struck by the thought that this
was a pretty romantic thing to say. She tried to sober herself
quickly, desperately trying to keep the impractical reality of
their relationship in the foreground of her thoughts. Perhaps,
she reasoned, their attraction arose from the forbidden nature of
even the proximity of their houses. Or maybe from the common
intimacy of their simultaneously burning kitchen lights, vigilant
together as one dim glow in the night. But of course she knew
there were other grounds and that they were a good match. They
were comfortable together, they could talk theory with the ease
of grad students, and, as Joe explained, they valued the same
virtuesboth creative and regulatory.
You are like this building that I want to design that is so
labyrinthine that even when you reenter a room youve been in
before, not only do you have the feeling that youve never stood
there prior, but also everything you understood about where
you had just been has shifted. And right now, Audrey, his voice
was cracking a little, and she noticed that he kept using her
name, right now I am outside, walking around and around the
foundation looking into the windows like a crazy man. I keep
imagining this idea of learning by being in the same place forever,
but you cant understand it without being there.
That sounds like the library, Joe. Audreys tone was even and
she continued very slowly with, And even though you are always
walking around my house, because you are my neighbor, that is
one of the most romantic and appropriate metaphors I have ever
heard. I could think about it for days and still feel affected. But Joe,
as much as I appreciate your honesty, I wonder how productive it
is. Do you have any idea about what we are supposed to do with
chapter 7 chapter 7 2 3
j uli a wei st sex y li brari an
| Indie Publishing 54
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 54 6/16/08 9:04:11 AM
Audrey was tall, lithe, and super sexy. She was sitting at her new
desk, getting to know the holdings of the Rochester Public Librarys
collection, a task she regarded as one of the most insignicant
undertakings of her last ten years. Quickly and silently admonishing
herself for being so geocentricdening irrelevant as land-locked
Audrey tried to remind herself that this was a time for emotional
growth. She pressed a nger to her thick, black, Prada glasses,
rubbed her legs together lazily, and wrote on a stray card catalog
card: Be less pretentious. It was the rst, and only, personal touch
she had made to her work space. The adjacent desk boasted a photo
of a Jell-O mold used to form the words Number One Grandma,
and Audrey hastily discarded the note, lest she appear insincere.
The last week had been hazy and automatic, as she set about to
close up her life in New York like a widow in an interstitial phase of
grief: numb and productive. She was worried only about leaving behind
her books, now under the charge of a subletter, and about people
talking to her out here like she was some kind of alien. The woman
at the Java Hut this morning glanced at Audreys designer T-shirt,
to interact with men with whom she had no chance of sleeping. The
signicantly older gentlemen, celebrities, the live-in ancs of other
girls, the men who are not normally characterized as potential sexual
partners, were for some reason under a different classication for
Audrey. She was, after all, a librarian, and it was her job to categorize
the true character of things by the most specic criteria. William, her ex
and rst college love, currently living with his girlfriend in Greenpoint,
was not led under unavailable, but rather usually occupied.
One can imagine, therefore, that when Audrey transmitted
to Will the aforementioned power couple of vaginal dysfunction,
things got a little complicated. When the girlfriend acquired the
surprises and yet nonetheless continued her romantic and domestic
partnership with Will, things got a little confusing. When Will
explained to Audrey in their nal conversation that neither he nor
said girlfriend could afford a New York one-bedroom that wasnt
shared by two people and decided it would be easier to forgive and
forget than endure such a drastic change in lifestyle, Audrey knew
she had to take a vacation.
The second incident was, quite simply, a not-boyfriend
becoming a live-in boyfriend following the loss of his irregular
installation job at PS1. After just crashing for three weeks, Jacob, a
one-time football star turned abstract painter, discovered that selling
coke was an easier way to make money than part-time museum
work, and left way more time for his canvases. As the paintings were
stacking up and Audreys socks were disappearing, she knew it was
time to move. Out of the city, away from the bad choices and lost
nights, to a place where after working hundred-hour weeks between
the library and her studio, she could be bone tired somewhere that
was not always too noisy to sleep deeply.
That place, as it turned out, was Rochester, Minnesota. Thanks to
the Mayo Clinic, the nations best and largest hospital, this was where
patients went hoping for some miracle to keep them from dying. To
Audrey, the position of head librarian for the Arts Collection opening
that May was just what the doctor ordered.
Typography
Literary works are usually set in traditional serif typefaces,
such as Garamond, Caslon, and Sabon. (See Design Basics.)
For the main text of Sexy Librarian we used a clean but classical
typeface called Electra, designed by W. A. Dwiggins in 1935.
The running heads, chapter numbers, and other supporting
elements are set in Hypatia, designed by Thomas Phinney in
2007; this crisp, contemporary sans serif font retains some of
the handwritten qualities of traditional typefaces. It provides a
nice complement to Electra.
Designers often choose a different font altogether for a
books cover, where specifc qualities may be needed to work
with the chosen imagery as well as to achieve high impact at
the point of purchase.
Hypatia Sans
body copy, Electra
Running Heads and page numbers
(in Hypatia Sans)
sexy layout
The fnal page layout for Sexy Librarian
features margins that are generous
but not too generous. The centered
heads provide a classical feeling, but
the overall design is not over-the-
top elegant. The book is friendly,
readable, and approachablelike a
girl you might say hello to in a bar.
Fiction | 55
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 55 6/16/08 9:04:14 AM
copyright page typically
appears on the back of the title
page. It provides details such as the
publishers address and web site,
copyright date, and the ever-crucial
ISBN number. Also valuable is
cataloging information for libraries;
our book includes a custom catalog
record written by Sherman Clarke, a
prominent librarian.
table of contents is a menu
for your book. A novel doesnt
necessarily need one, but since our
book includes critical essays, it was
essential.
Front matter
The front matter includes the parts of a book that precede the actual contents,
including the title page, copyright page, and table of contents. Sometimes
a preface, acknowledgment, or dedication is included in this section as well.
The front matter introduces your book and sets the visual atmosphere, like
bringing flowers to a dinner date. The front matter also includes essential
publishing data about your book. (See more in Publishing Basics.)
additional front matter Sexy Librarian starts
out with special material that gives the novel a surprising
context. Since the rejection letters inspired us to publish
this book, we decided to put them at the very front .
The letters provide a fascinating glimpse into the harsh
world of publishing. The standard order and content of the
front matter picks up after the rejection letters: title page,
copyright page, and table of contents.
SEXY
LIBRARIAN
a nov el cr i t i ca l edi t i on
|ulla Welst
rsst\ r\ |ennler Toblas
trfrrworo r\ Ellen Lupton
stusn roifions . rttfiorr . nrw \ork
cont ents
Prologue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Chapter 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Chapter 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Chapter 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Chapter 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Chapter 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Chapter 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Chapter 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Chapter 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Chapter 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Chapter 10. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
Epilogue
i miss you like hell . . . . . . . . 144
Julia Weist

Essay
in search of the sexy librarian 154
Jennifer Tobias

Afterword
publishing sexy librarian . . . . 170
Ellen Lupton
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title page shows the full title
of the book and lists the author as
well as any contributing authors who
should be associated with the book
when it is catalogued in libraries
or sold on line. The title page also
lists the publisher and the city of
publication.
| Indie Publishing 10 Design Your Own Fiction Book | 11
Cover Design
The cover of your novel is the first thing a potential reader
will see. This essential marketing tool needs to speak loudly
and clearly from a bookstore shelf or an online sales site,
catching attention and conveying ideas in a direct and
powerful way. The cover will become a kind of logo for your
book, appearing at a tiny scale in book reviews and press
announcements as well as full sized on the front of your
actual novel. Good book covers help sell books and make
them memorable. They entice readers to pick up the book and
look inside.
To create the cover for Sexy Librarian, designer Kristian
Bjrnard developed half a dozen different design directions
to share with the author. (Unless an author is a household
name, a commercial publisher will rarely allow him or her to
comment on cover designs.) A pictorial solution seemed
appropriate for this novel, so in order to prototype a number
of design concepts quickly, Kristian researched images on the
internet and took a number of shots himself, keeping in mind
that he would need to acquire rights to or produce high-
quality images later. Most of Kristians initial designs
conveyed the books sexy, tongue-in-cheek attitude by playing
with clichs about librarians or suggesting love in the stacks.
The author was most intrigued by a design featuring not
a cute librarian but an old-fashioned card catalog card
embellished with a lipstick kiss. Fetishize the book, not the
librarian, she suggested. Make the book into the sexy
object. In the next set of designs, Kristian dressed up a blank
book in various articles of sexy lingerie, and he tried various
ways to integrate the title with the photographs. The final
cover is startlingly simple: a basic book is wearing fishnet
stockings, with the text set big and bold over the photograph.
The cover resulted from a successful dialog between author
and designersomething that seldom takes place within
mainstream publishing.
type and image
The title of your book doesnt have
to be huge, but it does have to stand
out. Integrating the title with a
background picture can be tricky.
If the picture has a lot of variation
in color and contrast, then the
letterforms will start to disappear
against parts of the image. In this
design, a thin white outline around
the letters helps separate the text
from the photograph. Next time
you are at a bookstore, look at the
different ways designers handle this
problem. The easiest solution is to
start with a photograph that has big
areas of simple, nearly solid tone;
the photograph used here was
especially hard to work with. Photo
by Paul Bradbury.
| Indie Publishing 56
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 56 6/16/08 9:04:15 AM
progression
Often, an initial idea will spark a new direction. One
of the early cover proposals for Sexy Librarian featured
an image of an old catalog card embellished with
a lipstick kiss. After seeing this version, the author
got new ideas about where the design could go. She
encouraged designer Kristian Bjrnard to experiment
with sexy books (instead of picturing the actual
librarian). The cover progressed through various
stages of costume before reaching its fnal state: a
simple white book wrapped in a fshnet stocking.
the refuse pile
Plenty of designs get scrapped along
the way due to differing opinions and
desires among authors, designers,
and publishers. The author didnt
want to see a librarian on the cover.
and the winner is...
The fnal cover design for Sexy
Librarian, shown above, is powerful
and direct, with no distracting
elements. Getting to that point
required multiple photo shoots
and design studies. Design and
photography by Kristian Bjrnard.
Fiction | 57
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 57 6/16/08 9:04:19 AM
progression
Often, an initial idea will spark a new direction. One
of the early cover proposals for Sexy Librarian featured
an image of an old catalog card embellished with
a lipstick kiss. After seeing this version, the author
got new ideas about where the design could go. She
encouraged designer Kristian Bjrnard to experiment
with sexy books (instead of picturing the actual
librarian). The cover progressed through various
stages of costume before reaching its fnal state: a
simple white book wrapped in a fshnet stocking.
the refuse pile
Plenty of designs get scrapped along
the way due to differing opinions and
desires among authors, designers,
and publishers. The author didnt
want to see a librarian on the cover.
and the winner is...
The fnal cover design for Sexy
Librarian, shown above, is powerful
and direct, with no distracting
elements. Getting to that point
required multiple photo shoots
and design studies. Design and
photography by Kristian Bjrnard.
Fiction | 57
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 57 6/16/08 9:04:19 AM
progression
Often, an initial idea will spark a new direction. One
of the early cover proposals for Sexy Librarian featured
an image of an old catalog card embellished with
a lipstick kiss. After seeing this version, the author
got new ideas about where the design could go. She
encouraged designer Kristian Bjrnard to experiment
with sexy books (instead of picturing the actual
librarian). The cover progressed through various
stages of costume before reaching its fnal state: a
simple white book wrapped in a fshnet stocking.
the refuse pile
Plenty of designs get scrapped along
the way due to differing opinions and
desires among authors, designers,
and publishers. The author didnt
want to see a librarian on the cover.
and the winner is...
The fnal cover design for Sexy
Librarian, shown above, is powerful
and direct, with no distracting
elements. Getting to that point
required multiple photo shoots
and design studies. Design and
photography by Kristian Bjrnard.
Fiction | 57
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 57 6/16/08 9:04:19 AM
progression
Often, an initial idea will spark a new direction. One
of the early cover proposals for Sexy Librarian featured
an image of an old catalog card embellished with
a lipstick kiss. After seeing this version, the author
got new ideas about where the design could go. She
encouraged designer Kristian Bjrnard to experiment
with sexy books (instead of picturing the actual
librarian). The cover progressed through various
stages of costume before reaching its fnal state: a
simple white book wrapped in a fshnet stocking.
the refuse pile
Plenty of designs get scrapped along
the way due to differing opinions and
desires among authors, designers,
and publishers. The author didnt
want to see a librarian on the cover.
and the winner is...
The fnal cover design for Sexy
Librarian, shown above, is powerful
and direct, with no distracting
elements. Getting to that point
required multiple photo shoots
and design studies. Design and
photography by Kristian Bjrnard.
Fiction | 57
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 57 6/16/08 9:04:19 AM
progression
Often, an initial idea will spark a new direction. One
of the early cover proposals for Sexy Librarian featured
an image of an old catalog card embellished with
a lipstick kiss. After seeing this version, the author
got new ideas about where the design could go. She
encouraged designer Kristian Bjrnard to experiment
with sexy books (instead of picturing the actual
librarian). The cover progressed through various
stages of costume before reaching its fnal state: a
simple white book wrapped in a fshnet stocking.
the refuse pile
Plenty of designs get scrapped along
the way due to differing opinions and
desires among authors, designers,
and publishers. The author didnt
want to see a librarian on the cover.
and the winner is...
The fnal cover design for Sexy
Librarian, shown above, is powerful
and direct, with no distracting
elements. Getting to that point
required multiple photo shoots
and design studies. Design and
photography by Kristian Bjrnard.
Fiction | 57
03_Fiction_48-61.indd 57 6/16/08 9:04:19 AM
P
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essay by jennifer tobias
Ill never look at a discard pile quite the same way again.
Weist transcends the found object to become the found object.
- mark newgarden, author of we all die alone
Neither man nor book can resist the eventual conquest of Julia Weist.
- lumi tan, curator
Weist makes the circulation quicken.

- paul ramirez jonas, artist
www.SexyLibrarianNovel.com
S
E
X
Y

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cover designed by
kristian bjornard
PS
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.I395
S49
2008
176772
780615
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ISBN 978-0-6151-7677-2
51500
$15.00
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A NovEL cRItIcAL EdItIoN
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cover designed by
Kristian Bjornard,
Graphic Design MFA
program, MICA
P
S
3
6
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3
.
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3
9
5
S
4
9
2
0
0
8
essay by jennifer tobias
Ill never look at a discard pile quite the same way again.
Weist transcends the found object to become the found object.
- mark newgarden, author of we all die alone
Neither man nor book can resist the eventual conquest of Julia Weist.
- lumi tan, curator
Weist makes the circulation quicken.
- paul ramirez jonas, artist
www.SexyLibrarianNovel.com
S
E
X
Y

L
I
B
R
A
R
I
A
N

J
u
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a

W
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i
s
t







S
L
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S
H
cover designed by
kristian bjornard
PS
3623
.I395
S49
2008
176772 780615 9

ISBN 978-0-6151-7677-2
51500
$15.00
N 6
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julia weist
librarian
A NovEL cRItIcAL EdItIoN
Sexy
sexy brand The web site for
Sexy Librarian was built with open
source custom blogging software
(Textpattern). The site design allows
the author to regularly post fresh
information, events, and press
clippings. If you have minimal tech
skills, build a blog on an easy-to-use
service such as Blogger, or make a
MySpace or FaceBook page devoted
to your book. Take visual elements
from your book cover (photographs,
typography, and colors), and use
them to continually reinforce the
image of your project.
sexy press release Develop a
press release that tells a story about
your book. Thousands of romances
are published each year, but Sexy
Librarian is more than a romance. Its
an experimental project that speaks
to specifc audiences such as artists,
librarians, designers, and aspiring
publishers.
marketing tips for
authors and
indie publishers
Its not just about the
book. Many successful authors get
more out of the side-opportunities
associated with their books than
from actually selling copies. Use your
book to get publicity, gigs, speaking
engagements, consultant work, radio
appearances, and so on.
Broaden your notion of
success. Dont use book sales as a
measure of success; instead, gage how
much attention or new opportunities
the book has brought you.
Have a hook. Authors tend to
promote the book itself to potential
media venues, when really what they
should be promoting is the story
around the book. Every book needs a
hook to get attention.
Focus on your market.
Most books will appeal to certain
niches (graphic designers, gay nurses,
tattoo artists, born-again vegans,
etc). Theres more to be gained from
speaking to that community than
reaching out too broadly and watering
down your message.
Use the internet. Getting good
placement in Barnes and Nobles and
other standard retail chains is tough
for everyone but the top 1% of authors.
For the rest of us, the internet is a
great way to build word of mouth
and sales. Work the blogs!
Dont lose steam. Authors tend
to get fatigued after a month or two.
Keep up the activity.
J ULI A WEI ST S FI RST NOVEL I S A ROMANCE, A SCULPTURE,
AND AN EXPERI MENT I N I NDEPENDENT PUBLI SHI NG

Julia Weists novel Sexy Librarian is a romance about a young, hyper-
sophisticated librarian who leaves New York City for a job at a small-town
public library. Sexy Librarian began as an installation at Cooper Union School
of Art in New York City. While studying the deaccession policies of public
libraries (and working herself in a small-town library), Weist learned that
romance novels have the shortest shelf life of any category of popular ction.
After reading dozens of discarded romances, Weist decided to write her own
love story. Following industry guidelines, she wrote sample chapters and sent
her proposal to half a dozen major romance publishers, all of whom rejected
it. She exhibited the rejection letters as a work of art.
Those letters inspired writer and curator Ellen Lupton, an advocate of D.I.Y.
design and independent media, to publish Sexy Librarian. Why are books rejected? asks Lupton. The modern
publishing industry is a system of gateways that limit the entrance of newcomers. Today, that is changing as
creative producers in every eld are by-passing the gatekeepers and producing their own work. Sexy Librarian
is published using print-on-demand technology (POD), which allows a book to be digitally printed one-by-one
upon the point of purchase, sidestepping the old laws of mass production. The book is sold online for $15 a copy,
http://www.SexyLibrarianNovel.com.

Published as a critical edition, Sexy Librarian includes an essay by renowned librarian Jennifer Tobias,
a witty account of the librarians changing image as a gure of erotic repression and possibility. Nineteenth-
century librarians were wrong to think that sexuality could be removed from the workplace, writes Tobias, but
they were right to believe that it shouldnt matter. The book also includes Weists account of her broader artist
ellen lupton / slush editions
for immediate release
January 15, 2008
contact
Ellen Lupton, elupton@DesignWritingrResearch.org
Julia Weist, julia@deaccession.org
www.sexylibrariannovel.com
ESSAY BY JENNIFER TOBIAS
JULIA W
EIST
LIB
R
ARIAN
A NOVEL CRITICAL EDITION
S
E
X
Y
design: kristian bjornard
more
Promotion and Marketing
Now that your book is published, its time to get it out there.
A web site will be your most crucial tool. It helps you reach
potential readers as well as journalists and bloggers who want
easy access to excerpts, author photos, and cover art. The web
site for Sexy Librarian includes a news blog feature for
documenting special events and new art projects. Create a
press release to send out with review copies and to distribute
online, and come up with some fun promotional materials
such as postcards, bookmarks, tshirts, and mugs to share at
parties and events.
Your book is more than an end in itself: its about you or
your organization. Even if a selfpublished book does not sell a
huge number of copies, it can bring attention to your work as
an artist, writer, or expert commentator. Forget advertising.
Its expensive and far less effective than press notices and
wordofmouth. Do your research, and reach out to likely
editors with a short, crisp email and a link to your web site.
Send them a book if they express interest.
| Indie Publishing 16 Design Your Own Fiction Book | 17

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