Chip Kidd
Chip Kidd, a graphic designer and author, received a 2007 Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award for one of his innovative book covers
- By Jess Blumberg
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
How much input does the author give usually?
It all depends. Sometimes they'll literally design it for you even though they may not know that's what they're doing. Or sometimes, you know, they'll give you complete carte blanche, or some kind of combination of the two, somewhere in between. They're all different.
Does marketing or branding ever interfere with or influence a cover concept you want to create?
I'm pretty lucky as far as that goes. Every now and then, somebody from marketing will chime in about something or other. And sometimes they're right. But, no, I feel pretty lucky that way. In a sense, I'm sort of in an ivory tower.
Does the genre you're covering matter in the design?
The challenge is to subvert the genre basically. It's like what can a crime thriller look like that isn't predictable or we feel we haven't seen before? And it's hard. Often, you try and you fail and you move on. But I had to redesign the Philip K. Dick's Minority Report and that was an interesting challenge. I didn't want it to look like "science fiction," but it should still look appropriate for the subject matter.
Has becoming an author changed the way you design book jackets?
It hasn't changed the way I design book jackets. I think it's made me more alive to dealing with authors. Because again, I'm spoiled because I'm a writer designing my own cover. In the one sense it's a burden, on the other I can't imagine the fate of my book jacket being in someone else's hands to sort of decide for me. I think for some writers it's very traumatic. You know, they get a jacket they don't like and they don't know whether to speak up or accept it. Having seen the publishing process as an author, it's made me a little bit more sympathetic than I used to be.
Does a typical idea come from the book itself, the author, something on the street, a flea market, a dream, or what?
It's totally everywhere. Absolutely. And the nice thing about books is the deadlines aren't as crazy as somewhere like a magazine or, God forbid, a newspaper. So, you have the luxury of time usually, to read a book and let it kind of like simmer and percolate in your head. And waiting for the right solution to come along, whether it's something you come up with on your own or a piece of art they you see in a gallery. I would definitely recommend anybody who wants to be a book jacket designer to move to New York City.
How is a book cover different from an album or magazine cover?
Hmm. Well, the album cover, for all intents and purposes, it's weird, because it's like the walking dead. They still exist and they still get made, but it's almost like "why?" With everybody buying music online, it's literally been reduced to the size of a postage stamp. For at least 10 years now, the music video has completely replaced the album cover as the key piece of visual iconography connected with a certain album.
Magazine covers, by in large, they're just dying to tell you everything. They can't tell you enough. All the smattering all over the front of the magazine. They're just shrieking at you everything inside. Where a book cover, if it's done right, is going to just suggest a sensibility, it's going to be a lot more coy and a lot more discrete.
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Comments (2)
Mr. Kidd, Could you expand further about a cover not being too literal? I have written 6 books for architects and interior designers and university college studentsf, but now am attempting a book for the general public on energy-efficient lighting. I know the title must be catchy, short, and a "hot button" for them and capture their attention in about 3 seconds. Being literal, for me, seems to be necessary to accomplish these things. Thank you for your comments on these issues.
Posted by Jane Grosslight on December 24,2007 | 11:53 AM
Please forward this comment to Chip Kidd: I am writing a book on my WW2 experiences as a Lone Wolf B-24 Bomber pilot and hope to have the book published and am intersted in pursuing the possibility of working with Chip Kidd on an illustrated cover for my book. Thank you very much. Best Regards. Walter Mattson
Posted by Walter Mattson on November 30,2007 | 09:51 PM