![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh7yUeW6roAcuHi0fhRWvhafGbucodlQY1eJsxeHc-En9hKnEX1vk5ewvK38MwgwrcEfcHfYOcgM0Y6fjSSFKE2DtyWvNPtimJt47QCyzIbHN7cryW9itbT9bnE9wN6VzNIUawUmRwdA-Q/s400/1.jpg)
I am sure every cover designer can relate to this. How many times are you supplied with a black and white image for a cover and have to make it visually interesting? I don't think I have another duotone effect left in my arsenal. I really liked this image of an aboriginal youth striking an Elvis pose for a book on aboriginal music in Canada - not the kind of image usually associated with this kind of music - but couldn't get it to work using duotones, tritones, sepiatone etc. Instead, I played around with it in Photoshop by adding colour and filters and arrived at something more graphically interesting. This is still a work in progress and needs some finessing but I like where it is going.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRaKXuzDfWcybyzazruizR0B2Hy7LhsGSVSrHu9e2Z2uUWypkFdLgA_3ZvQztehH1uVfyNW0dil6fVwhx_fOcBMdrNnV7jqK58Dsp1GU8mY0geluXDD1qOdNjqQxSvWAijDnLq2TIRm8A/s400/2b.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNSe9S63G3jPBcY41YgJeKoGQkpIRz2cga8Y2D3Ucxc3MbpztucHtkRc9VahPlfel0oJ1-q2J4kcOQ9jD4Ae-kcO-Ts4N4PaYyjPpJvWl_CpLqxkEEWusTNsE1prFSz22Yu4lDTHbG9IM/s200/3a.jpg)