Re-illustrating books for the Kindle by Elizabeth Kay
There are lots of
reasons for re-illustrating a previously published book when you’re converting
it for the Kindle. The originals, drawn by someone else, may not have been to
your liking. It may simply be a matter of style – or the illustrator may have
got some things fundamentally wrong, like the age of the protagonists, or
whether one of your fantasy creatures has wings/horns/sharp pointy teeth. The
best illustrations I have ever been sent were those of Miho Sataki, in the Japanese
editions of The Divide, who read everything so carefully that each tiny
detail was absolutely accurate. Her sense of design was wonderful, too.
I never draw or paint straight onto a computer screen. I don’t seem to have the same control over a mouse as I do a paintbrush. However, if you scan a watercolour or a pastel or pencil drawing into a paint program, you can end up with something close to perfection – bleedbacks obliterated, smudges and paint splatters removed, lines cleaned up and flat colours regularised. The trouble is that paint programs are really complicated, and unless you have the time to learn them inside out you’ll never use all the functions, and may well drive yourself bonkers trying to work out how to do one apparently small thing. So I teach myself everything on a need to know basis. I’m finally getting to grips with the difference between smudging and softening and dodging and burning – but the most important button of all is the Undo! It’s also vital to save different versions of your illustration as you go, and start the numbering at 01 so that they always line up in order. Unless you think you’re going to go into the hundreds, in which case you start at 001. I do this for book versions as well, because I’m lazy enough not to want to hunt through files for the most recent document.
The cover of Jinx on the Divide was executed in several stages. For the background, I found a photograph I had taken of the Northern lights in Norway, put it into Paintshop Pro, enhanced it, and brightened the colours. I also changed the outline of the mountains to something I liked better, and erased a building. I then saved this, and loaded into Photoshop. The picture of the Dire Wolf was done in watercolour, and scanned into my computer. I then had the contrast increased and the edges tidied up in Paintshop Pro. I saved it again (with a different filename – you don’t want to get your pictures confused) and loaded it into Photoshop. I used the lasso feature to capture the image, and then made its white background transparent. After that I placed it on top of my background, saved the new image, and clicked on the Text feature. I placed the start of the text in the middle of the page at the top, so that as I entered the words they remained centred. I could mess around with different fonts, sizes and colours until I arrived at something I liked. I then saved the final image, and there was my cover.
The cover of Hunted was easier, as I already had an elephant I wanted to use, so
it was merely a question of cropping it the way I wanted, putting it into
Photoshop, and adding the text. I was able to replace the original
illustrations with watercolours I already had, and I simply inserted one at the
start of each new chapter.
I’ve had a
couple of covers such as Beware of Men with Moustaches that have a white background.
Adding a faint border is important, because otherwise the shape of the book is
lost. There are a lot of professionally-produced covers around these days, but
there’s something about them that seems to give the game away, and makes them
look too similar even if the subject matter is poles apart. I can’t put my
finger on exactly what it is, but covers designed from scratch are more
eye-catching.
If the book was first published some time ago the drawings
may be out of date; the shoebox-sized mobile phone of 1995 bears no resemblance
to the smart phones in use today. There’s also the question of royalties – this
way, you avoid those complexities altogether.
The actual
mechanics are remarkably easy. Make sure your illustration is a jpeg, and centre
where you want it in the text. If you’re using Word you can re-size it as many
times as you like in situ, until you’re happy with the result. Remember that
anything entered as a jpeg won’t change size when you alter the font size, and
that not many people in the UK yet have a Kindle fire (although quite a few
have iPads!), so the picture must look just as clear in black and white as it
does in colour. The cover, however, is another matter, as this will appear on
the Amazon site in full colour, although it will be monochromatic on most
Kindles.
I never draw or paint straight onto a computer screen. I don’t seem to have the same control over a mouse as I do a paintbrush. However, if you scan a watercolour or a pastel or pencil drawing into a paint program, you can end up with something close to perfection – bleedbacks obliterated, smudges and paint splatters removed, lines cleaned up and flat colours regularised. The trouble is that paint programs are really complicated, and unless you have the time to learn them inside out you’ll never use all the functions, and may well drive yourself bonkers trying to work out how to do one apparently small thing. So I teach myself everything on a need to know basis. I’m finally getting to grips with the difference between smudging and softening and dodging and burning – but the most important button of all is the Undo! It’s also vital to save different versions of your illustration as you go, and start the numbering at 01 so that they always line up in order. Unless you think you’re going to go into the hundreds, in which case you start at 001. I do this for book versions as well, because I’m lazy enough not to want to hunt through files for the most recent document.
The program I first acquired was Paint shop Pro, followed by
Photoshop. They both work along fairly similar lines, but each has its easy
bits and impossible bits and using a combination of the two has been the answer
for me. I’ve never got to grip with layers in Paint Shop Pro, although in
Photoshop it’s easy. But Photoshop offers such a bewildering array of ways to
muck about with the your artwork that I stick to the simpler range of options
on the other program.
The cover of Jinx on the Divide was executed in several stages. For the background, I found a photograph I had taken of the Northern lights in Norway, put it into Paintshop Pro, enhanced it, and brightened the colours. I also changed the outline of the mountains to something I liked better, and erased a building. I then saved this, and loaded into Photoshop. The picture of the Dire Wolf was done in watercolour, and scanned into my computer. I then had the contrast increased and the edges tidied up in Paintshop Pro. I saved it again (with a different filename – you don’t want to get your pictures confused) and loaded it into Photoshop. I used the lasso feature to capture the image, and then made its white background transparent. After that I placed it on top of my background, saved the new image, and clicked on the Text feature. I placed the start of the text in the middle of the page at the top, so that as I entered the words they remained centred. I could mess around with different fonts, sizes and colours until I arrived at something I liked. I then saved the final image, and there was my cover.
I’ve really enjoyed re-illustrating my own books, and I’ve
done some pig cartoons for someone else - a volume of poems called Old Possum's Book of Practical Pigs. I only did a pencil drawing for each one of these
because they were stylised, and just used black and white and pink. Then I put
them straight into Paintshop Pro where I could clean them up, and make sure the
lines were the right thickness. Black is a killer; I always use a dark grey, as
it’s less in your face.
It’s been fun
doing these pictures. And when I get a bit more time I’ll learn how to use all
those other features… when I get a bit more time…
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