About
Follow/Share
Featured Designers
Solo
An Object of Beauty
Procession of the Dead
Stuff
New Yorker Stories
Down and Delirious in Mexico City
The Financial Lives of Poets
30th Anniversary Hitchhiker's Series
You're a Horrible Person, But I Like You
Glover's Mistake
Listening to Trees
Role Models
Spine Series
Chekhov Series
Future Classics
Goethes Hinrichtung
Piracy
La Casa de los Amores Imposibles
Cork Boat
The Finger
The Dream of Perpetual Motion
Blacklands
The Marrowbone Marble Company
Bigfoot
The 6th Lamentation and The Gardens of...
The Mosaic Experiment
Chicago
Soulless, Changeless, Blameless
Dark Paradise
The 4 Phase Man
Jules Verne Series
This is My Book, This is Your Book
Great Short Works
Absolute Ronin
Kobo Abe
A Fraction of the Whole
Firefly Brothers
The Girl Who Ate Kalamazoo
Rest, Relax, Read Series
Alvin Lustig Covers
Yankee Invasion
Foundations of Faith Series
Vida de Vivos / Alexandria Quartet
Infidel Poetics
The Gone-Away World
Brief and Frightening Reign
The Nightingales of Troy
From Square One
Faber Films
Books From My Travels
The Interrogative Mood
This Will Kill You
The Affinity Bridge
Brothers
The Mad Ones
Irvine Welsh
Space Opera
Wet Apples, White Blood
Chester Himes Series
Vintage Classics
Was Superman A Spy?
Faber 80th Poetry Series
When We Were Romans
Ross Macdonald Series
The Unbinding
The Story of God
Perforated Heart
The Sherlock Holmes Series
Milk
Peter Mendelsund & Vertical Press
The Invisible Hook
Exit A
Giants of Jazz
James Bond Collection
Beasts!
Anna Blundy Series
Against Happiness
Peter Carey Backlist
Chicago
The Little Giant of Aberdeen County
Great Journeys
Jules Verne Series
The Little Sleep
Counterpoint: Daniel Libeskind
Mondadori Poetry Series
2666
Authors of the Storm
Hollow Earth
Sea of Poppies UK Edition
Sea of Poppies US Edition
The Dark Stuff
Twisted Head
Llosa Series
Bella Ciao/Flieh Mit Dem Lowen/Die Erb...
The Secret Life of Cowboys
In The Woods
The Art of Redemption
Foreigners
The 351 Books of Irma Arcuri
Sedaris
Accidentally on Purpose
The Worst Years of Your Life
8
Stephen King Series
Paddy Whacked
St. Cyborg's
Obsession
Previous / Next image (1 of 5)


Spine Series
Author: H.G. Wells
Designer: Tim Phelan
Publisher: Spine Publishing - a new publishing house that has a unique interest in reviving classical literature to engage a modern audience. H.G Wells is to be their first series. (fictional "not real" publishing house)
Typefaces: As there were 4 books in the series I needed to keep some elements of the design consistent. I adopted the Franklin Gothic family for its neutrality and mainly focused on its condensed typefaces which can be seen along each spine and on some of the covers.

Great work Tim. Love the interest and practicality of these! —Jason Gabbert

Were there any unique challenges to this project?
A series is always a challenge. One of the obvious challenges was to define a unique concept for each book while creating certain consistencies in the series. I always love the challenge of condensing complex information into designs that communicate underlying themes of the story. Having not read some of these books I had to do a lot of reading to come up with an intelligent concept for each book.

Previous / Next image (1 of 5)

The Invisible Man
The Invisible Man established the construction for each concept, which would revolve around the use of paper and collage.
       Using torn paper to mimic bandages, it struck me that I could further use this device to emphasise Griffins underlying insanity. The finished design ended up as a pastiche on the typical Invisible Man cliché which usually depicts a suit, top hat and no face.
       There was a painful amount of scanning trial and error needed to get the perfect depth and shading on the overlapping paper. The typography was rendered through printed black paper by scratching with a scalpel over a light-box.

Previous / Next image (1 of 5)

The War of the Worlds
I drew inspiration from the Orson Welles' radio adaption that panicked America in 1938. As extracts of the novel are written in a formal journalistic style, my starting point referenced torn newspapers and half-tone patterns. The looming radio mast on the front cover is also a slight homage to the tripods, indicating the controversy and terror created by the broadcast was purely concocted by man and not martian.

Previous / Next image (1 of 5)

The Time Machine
To manufacture a time machine would require blueprints, diagrams, scribbled thoughts and lots of maths! These were the foundation for this design.
       It was quite a task to get the typography right, all of which had to be traced in a crude but accurate sort of way and then scanned in. In order to get the right effect, I realised I had to trace the type at a very small point size and then blow it up.

Previous / Next image (1 of 5)

The Island of Dr Moreau
Although this novel contains a lot of social allegories, it's essentially the tale of a mad scientist who dissects and turns people into animals. This was the hardest concept to define. I was playing around with dirt and muddy fingerprints for a while. Eventually I whittled it down to simpler metaphor; a doctor's stethoscope/dog lead. The sliced and revealed type also mimics the dissection and mutilation that Dr Moreau inflicts upon his patients.

Previous / Next image (1 of 5)

The rest of the jacket design
The back of each jacket contains a specific quote from every novel that should engage a potential reader. As these novels are such classics I felt it was redundant to have the synopsis on the back. Instead, a 'did you know' fact can be found on each book that gives the reader a unique fact about how book has influenced something or someone.

For example:
'At the age of 16, Robert Goddard was so inspired by The War of The Worlds that he spent much of this time inventing rockets. The research begun by Goddard eventually culminated in the Apollo program's landing on the moon.'

Furthermore, as an added bonus for the reader I wanted the back flap to have a tear-away bookmark that could also advertise/promote Spine publishing house.

Add Comment


6.29.10 // Ian said:

beautiful. Very fun covers. Big fan of the Island cover. They are all very attractive though. Only certain publishers will let you do this to classics.

6.29.10 // Strng said:

Very cool and inspirating. Thanks for such attractive work.

6.29.10 // Nate Eaton said:

Fascinating take on these 4 classics. Visually and conceptually, these are simply stunning. I think the attention to the typography on each of these really enhances not only the cover concepts, but the overall jist of the books themselves. Very refreshing Tim.

And thank you Jason for including so many detail shots in this post.

6.29.10 // Jason Gabbert said:

Thanks Nate! I'd love to say the photography on this post was ours, but Tim shot them himself!