When creativity is too much of a good thing.

March 6, 2008 at 5:26 pm Leave a comment

I freakin’ love designing title pages and chapter starts.  It’s a small thing, but brings me a little bit of joy, everyday.

Working HardThe best is when an author, who’s purchased Custom Typesetting, has no real preference for the design.  They don’t care about the font style, the font size, where I place the text, or my adding a glyph to dress up the page.  They tell me that I’m the professional and I know what’ll work best for their book.

So, I watermark an innocuous glyph behind the chapter title, dropping the chapter start about a third of the way down on the page.  Or I right-align the chapter title, choose a really big font, and make it 50% black.  Or find a really graphic, crazy-looking font, letting the letters in the title dress up the page.

OverjoyedAnd the book looks good.  And, mostly, the author was right to trust in me.  I’ve surprised them with what we’re capable of doing…  I’ve helped them realize their vision when they didn’t even know they had one…  I’ve made real, in black (or gray) characters on a white page, what they saw in their head but didn’t know how to tell me.  And I feel great!

But sometimes, not very often, I mess up.  I overestimate their flexibility, doing something way too modern for their tastes, and making them think I don’t know what I’m doing.  I create a design that’s the exact opposite of their vision, though they didn’t specifically tell me what their vision entails, or I wasn’t hearing right when they tried to communicate it.  Or I just go overboard, using an element from an image they’ve supplied as a repeating motif in the book — and choosing their least favorite part of the image.

ConfusionsThen I feel awful.  I’ve taken a risk with the design, and the author thinks I’ve intentionally ruined their book.  But I haven’t — I just got it wrong.  And it’s sad when my authors think I don’t know what I’m doing, or that I’m deliberately trying to mess with their work.

I guess the moral of the story, if there is one, is that sometimes your designer makes mistakes.  And it’s not because we don’t care, ’cause we really do — we just misjudged what was right for your book.  So, if you give us a little leeway when designing the book, and you get something back that you totally hate, chances are your book designer is going to be more than happy to work with you to perfect the design.  ‘Cause we love what we do.

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Imagine a setting or situation in which you would be an outsider. Say it’s your first day learning karate and the rest of your class are black belts. Or perhaps you find yourself smack dab in the middle of an NRA conference and you adamantly oppose firearms. How would you react? How would you feel? Being an outsider can often provide the perfect springboard into your character’s mentalities as well as an objective viewpoint that can be used to describe settings more naturally. (2/4/11)

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When it comes to writing, seeing isn’t always believing. Next time you find yourself in front of your keyboard about to begin another piece, try closing your eyes and typing. Imagine the setting, characters, thoughts and emotions you’re trying to capture and start writing without opening your eyes. Just the look of a sentence can often disrupt your flow or rhythm, and rereading what you’ve already written will not only slow you down, but upset your train of thought as well. (2/4/11)

Last Week’s Writing Prompt

Remember, not all stories have resolutions. Think about a conflict that’s online, where the characters simply exist within the tension. Perhaps an archeological search for some relic, or maybe a neighborly feud that gone on for years. Now, write a story or poem that attempts to capture this conflict, without reaching for a clean, fair or ironic resolution.

Last Week’s Writing Tip

Read the reviews. See how readers and critics think. Don’t fall into the same juvenile traps the books with bad reviews often do. Learn from their mistakes and shape your manuscript into a publication worthy of rave reviews.

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