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Beautiful Books: A Very Special Episode
In this Beautiful Books feature, designer Jared Shapiro talks to us about the joys of getting carried away in his creative design for nathan dueck’s A Very Special Episode (Wolsak and Wynn) – the result of which is an intelligent use of font and form that elevates nathan’s playful, pop-culturally influenced poetry.
ALU: Were there any outtakes from A Very Special Episode that you can share? Any design ideas that got cut?
I think nathan, Ashley (Wolsak’s Managing Editor), and I got carried away in the fun of creating this book. We tried a lot of things—there were so many ideas floating around that eventually we had to say, “Okay, remember: we have a deadline.” After creating the TV Guide appendix, we thought about adding a secret code in there. Channels were in either white with black text, or black with white text. I believe nathan came up with the idea to use the Fibonacci Sequence to colour coordinate the page numbers. That was only a couple days before the deadline, and so it didn’t make the cut.
We also played around with the TV in “Picture-In-Picture” a few times, and nathan probably reworked “My After School Haikus”about a dozen times. And, I’m not gonna’ lie, I had somewhat clandestine thoughts about adding something subtle to the Cosby poem, an acknowledgement of what he became, but I ended up keeping those ideas to myself.Originally, we inserted an old typewriter I created where the secret code for “Expletypography” replaced the letters on the keys. It was a good piece, but it didn’t fit with the tone of the book, and was ultimately (and sadly) cut.Oh, also, when I was first given the manuscript to look at, I was sold by a poem that had a “Weird Al” Yankovic theme, and when I went to create the book’s interior I learned it was cut from the final!
ALU: Who are some of your favourite designers and what kind of influence have they had over your own work?
Long before I was a typesetter I was a huge fan of Mark Danielewski’s House of Leaves. The thing’s a layout masterpiece! From the obvious font changes to the subtle Easter Eggs (every mention, and I mean every mention of the word house is written in blue font), Danielewski took great care to make sure all of his design elements were not only visually pleasing, but also functional. I think I read somewhere that whenever he wanted the reader to run through the text he’d space out the words, and force the reader to turn the pages frequently. Whenever he wanted the reader to slow down he’d condense the words, force them to read the text more carefully. That’s typesetting to the next level.
Then there’s Nigel French—a guy I’ve never met, but has taught me oh-so-much. My typesetting career began when a publisher came to me, asking if I knew how to lay out a book. I hadn’t finished my course on book publishing yet, but I said yes anyway. I then ran straight to my teacher, and told him I needed to learn how to design a book, and quickly. That was when I was directed to Lynda.com, and Nigel French’s course on interior book designs.