COVER DESIGN BRIEF — They Can All Bird
CONCEPT
The cover must function as evidence, not entertainment. It should look like a genuine academic publication that the reader “found” rather than purchased. The blur between fiction and reality depends on this first impression.
Key aesthetic: 1970s-80s academic press, government report, or field guide. Dry. Institutional. Slightly unsettling in its neutrality.
FRONT COVER
Layout:
[Top: 15% margin — institutional header]
CONVERGENCE PRESS • NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA
SESSION 28409296 — ARCHIVAL DOCUMENT
[Center: 50% — the image]
[The ceramic birdbath, photographed from above]
[Water surface reflecting sky, slightly distorted]
[One green parakeet visible at the edge, watching]
[Overhead, stark, forensic photography aesthetic]
[Lower center: 25% — typography]
THEY CAN ALL BIRD
Being a True Account of the North Platte Experiments
Edited from the Papers of
DR. ELEANORA VOSS
With Annotations by
M. REYES
[Bottom: 10% — barcode space, institutional footer]
Typography:
- Title: Helvetica Bold, all caps, 48pt, black
- Subtitle: Times New Roman Italic, 18pt, dark gray
- Author: Helvetica Medium, 14pt, all caps
- Editor: Times New Roman, 12pt, regular
Color Palette:
- Background: Warm off-white (#F5F1E8) — aged paper
- Text: Near-black (#1A1A1A)
- Accent: Faded institutional blue (#4A5D75) — spine, back cover
- Image: Desaturated, slightly yellowed, documentary feel
Image Treatment:
- The birdbath from directly above (flat lay)
- Water should catch light strangely — too still, too clear
- One green parakeet at the rim, looking up at the viewer
- Slight vignette, suggesting hidden surveillance
- Optional: faint fingerprints on the ceramic edge
SPINE
Width: 0.75” (for 300-page book)
Layout (top to bottom):
[Top]
CONVERGENCE
PRESS
[Center, rotated 90°]
THEY CAN ALL BIRD
[Bottom]
VOSS • REYES
28409296
Colors:
- Background: Institutional blue (#4A5D75)
- Text: Off-white (#F5F1E8)
BACK COVER
Layout:
[Top: 20% — institutional stamp]
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ SESSION 28409296 │
│ ARCHIVAL DOCUMENT │
│ DO NOT REMOVE FROM PREMISES │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
[Faded red stamp, slightly smudged]
[Left: 40% — blurb]
THEY CAN ALL BIRD presents the recovered
papers of Dr. Eleanora Voss, a computational
biologist who vanished from the University
of Nebraska–Lincoln in February 2026 following
unauthorized experiments in cognitive
enhancement.
Discovered hidden beneath a ceramic birdbath
in North Platte, Nebraska, this annotated
manuscript documents what may be the most
significant—and most dangerous—scientific
breakthrough of the twenty-first century.
[Right: 40% — quote/testimonial]
"The birds are patient. They can all bird.
Can you?"
— M. Reyes, final marginalia
[Bottom: 40% — barcode, price, institutional info]
ISBN: 978-0-0000000-0-0
$14.95 US / $18.95 CAN
CONVERGENCE PRESS
North Platte, Nebraska
www.kbird.ai
[Small print]
This document is provided for educational
purposes only. The publisher assumes no
liability for application of the Convergence
Protocol.
Additional Elements (optional):
- Faint water stain across lower right corner
- Barcode designed to look like an evidence tag
- Small photograph of Dr. Voss (the AI-generated portrait)
- “Property of UNL Special Collections” stamp (faded)
FONTS
Primary (Titles/Institutional): Helvetica or Arial
- Clean, neutral, bureaucratic
- Conveys “this is serious, this is real”
Secondary (Body/Quotes): Times New Roman
- Academic, traditional, authoritative
Accent (Stamps/Notes): Courier or American Typewriter
- Typewritten urgency
- Conveys “this was added later, unofficial”
IMAGE ASSETS NEEDED
-
The Birdbath (Hero Image)
- Overhead photograph or photorealistic render
- Ceramic, weathered, “color of old bruises”
- Water surface reflecting sky
- One green parakeet at rim
- Slightly unsettling composition
-
Dr. Eleanora Voss Portrait
- Academic headshot, 1970s aesthetic
- Serious, intelligent, slightly tired
- Used on back cover and author page
-
Session 28409296 Stamp
- Faded red institutional stamp
- “ARCHIVAL DOCUMENT — DO NOT REMOVE”
- Used on back cover and interior pages
-
Evidence Photography Elements
- Ruler scale (for “forensic” feel)
- Fingerprint dust patterns
- Water stains, coffee rings
- Used as texture layers
ALTERNATE COVER CONCEPT (Limited Edition)
For a premium hardcover or collector’s edition:
Concept: “The Document Tube”
- Book slides into a cylindrical container resembling the PVC tube from Chapter 1
- Container has “READ THIS” and “SESSION 28409296” printed on it
- Weatherproof, olive drab, slightly battered
- Book inside has plain brown paper cover with minimal typography
- Includes replica “evidence”:
- Photograph of Romeo
- Feather (synthetic, green)
- Coordinates card (North Platte)
- Handwritten note from “M. Reyes”
Price Point: $45-65 (limited run of 500)
PRODUCTION NOTES
Paperback:
- Matte finish (not glossy) — conveys seriousness, age
- 10pt C1S stock (cardstock weight)
- Spot UV on water surface (subtle, catches light)
Hardcover:
- Case laminate with printed cover
- Option: dust jacket with “archival document” wrap
- Foil stamp on spine: “28409296”
Ebook:
- Thumbnail must read at 100px height (bold title)
- Simple, high contrast
- “Session 28409296” prominent (curiosity hook)
DESIGNER BRIEF (To Send)
“Design a book cover that looks like a found government report or academic archive from 1976. The subject is unauthorized animal cognition experiments. The tone is institutional, dry, slightly ominous—not horror, but unease.
Key image: a ceramic birdbath photographed from above, one green parakeet at the rim, watching the viewer.
Typography: Helvetica, Times New Roman, institutional stamps.
Color palette: Aged paper, faded blue, near-black text.
The reader should wonder, even for a moment, if this is a real document.”
REFERENCE COVERS
- The Crying of Lot 49 (Thomas Pynchon) — institutional paranoia
- House of Leaves (Mark Z. Danielewski) — found document aesthetic
- Annihilation (Jeff VanderMeer) — scientific, ominous
- The Southern Reach Trilogy (all three) — series cohesion
- Government field guides (USGS, 1970s) — institutional authenticity
“The cover is the first marginalia.”