eCovers Pro
Thank you for investing in this manual. Now, you have your E-book done but what next? You are now looking to get a professional eCover designed to give your E-book a professional look and an edge over other E-books out there in the Internet marketplace.
Thank you for investing in this manual. Now, you have your E-book done but what next? You are now looking to get a professional eCover designed to give your E-book a professional look and an edge over other E-books out there in the Internet marketplace. But what really concerns you now is that you just DON’T have the big bucks to hire a graphic designer to get the job done for you. Now, if you have more than one E-book, that can also mean an average “$99 times the number of eCovers you need for each E-book you have written” that you have to fork out of your wallet!
Forget software that create eCovers for you, too. They cost nearly as much and still require a degree of designing skills on your part. In addition, you may not like the end results! That is why this manual is for you; to learn how to make your own professional eCovers with Photoshop without having to spend a bomb on hiring your own graphic designer or even buy a software that can’t give you your desired results! By giving a “tangible” appearance to your E-book, your E-book’s credibility and perceived value will be so much higher. Now, fire up Adobe Photoshop program and hop on to the first chapter. This will be quick and easy and in less than an hour from now, you will have all of what it takes to design unlimited eCovers for yourself – professionally! Create Your Own Professional eCovers With Photoshop! - 5 – Create Your Own Professional eCovers With Photoshop! Create Your Own Professional eCovers With Photoshop! - 6 – Chapter 1 The Secrets of a Realistic eCover Many have attempted to create 3D eCovers in Photoshop environment alone… without much success, unfortunately. Speaking from an expert’s point of view, this is because they often start with cutting out the “3D” shape of an E-book and add elements to it by using the Distort function in the Free Transform gizmo. And the end result? A jumbled up mixture of text, shapes and graphics that are completely out of perspective.