To ease myself back into book design, I’m trying out Pages, Apple’s word-processor, which you can use to create e-books. I’ve gone for the ‘Traditional Novel’ template and, to keep things simple, I’m sticking to the design as far as possible. So far, I’ve only had to change the colour of the title, so that it shows up against my photograph.
I took the photograph on a visit to Sewerby Hall on Wednesday. I’d already decided on my subject, so I was on the look-out for a vintage armchair. Most of the furniture in the Hall is on loan from the Victoria & Albert Museum and has been carefully chosen to recreate the interiors as they appear in photographs taken in the Hall’s Edwardian heyday.
My holiday reading during our short break at Bridlington was a paperback of a Vera novel by crime-writer Ann Cleeves. The paperback’s cover features a glowering monochrome landscape, so I’ve gone for a similar treatment for my photograph, using various filters in Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop CC 2019.
I’ve used Lightroom’s ‘black and white split tone’, with added grain and some vignetting. When I took the photograph (having first checked with the attendant that photography was allowed), I had to crouch down to get the angle on the chair that I was after. This meant that the perspective of the paneling in the background was skewed, so I’ve used Photoshop’s ‘Edit/Transform/Skew’ command to straighten it up.
The author’s name was randomly generated in my favourite writing program, Scrivener. The original story, The Chair, is by my sister. It appears in an old school magazine which I came across recently.
Links
Apple Pages ‘Create and collaborate on documents that are beautiful beyond words’ . . . such as my mystery story cover!
Adobe Creative Cloud: includes Lightroom CC and Photoshop CC
Scrivener ‘the go-to app for writers of all kinds’
I don’t remember writing this. What’s it about and is it any good? If it is, you can use my name; if not, the randomly generated author can take the blame!
There’s a copy in your e-mail. Is it good? We’ve already got Judi Dench and Helen Mirren fighting over the role of ‘Old Lady with Scissors’.
Not Maggie Smith? What does “Yorkshire your e-mail” mean?
Whoops, no idea where that ‘Yorkshire’ came from! (but I suspect predictive text again) I’ll message you a link to the story.