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Coloring Books
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Lee
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Sep 17, 2016 09:48AM

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Did you do a bundle at any time? Children's Book + coloring book?




This might be a silly question, but how do you get a coloring book self-published? Are there specific companies you use that print on the coloring book type of paper?

Sharlin, thanks for sharing this information. Do you think that coloring books in the literary world are being done mostly by those authors of 'childrens' books only, or have you heard of other genres going in that direction? Thanks!

Sharlin, thanks for sharing this information. Do you think that coloring books in the liter..."
Adult coloring books are HOT in Georgia right now and have been for a year, I'd say. That's why I chose to do one. I used Create Space also. Since my print book is one of vignettes, it fit perfectly with one story per coloring page to match the read story. My illustrator is fantastic. In real life she designs children's books as well.

I illustrated a coloring book for another author, Alex Bledsoe. He writes fantasy books, and I created the coloring book to go along with them.
I have two projects right now. One is a historical society that would like a coloring book for their town's history. Another is a band that wants a coloring book of themselves, to sell at concerts. I seem to have hit a niche market.
I have a question, though: What should I charge these people? With Bledsoe, I took 50% of profits. With the historical society, I'm meeting them on Monday, and I can't decide if I should charge them per drawing, too? In addition to commission. I'm not making much money on the Bledsoe coloring book. The band I think I should definitely charge beyond comission, because they really aren't very well known.
What is a reasonable price for my services as illustrator, do you think?

I am surprised to know that you can publish a coloring book with Createspace. I was thinking publishers that more accepting to illustrations would likely publish a coloring book but if CS does then I guess I'm good to go. I do have a few questions I'd like help with.
-Should you hire an illustrator or can you also use people you know to draw the illustrations for you? I know quite a few people who can draw, they aren't professional but they have serious drawing skills.
-Seeing that Adult Coloring books are hot right now, how would someone go about marketing and reaching the audience?
-What would you price a coloring book at?
-If the illustrator is doing most of the work for drawings based off your work then how does payment and royalties work?


What do you mean by, "on the go"?

"On the go" is like, if you're currently doing something, like, reading a book by Stephen King, for instance


Coloring books are a standard feature I provide for my clients on Fiverr. I'm a TRS there and the coloring books are usually offered on their websites as a free giveaway to get the kids involved in the story if they're not ready to buy yet...or a bonus if they do.
@Shoshanah: I have found that what I charge depends on the client. Most I charge up front...because I can't live off "IF-come" and so people's budgets tend to be a natural filter for me. My last client from Fiverr was for $4650 for a 26 page children's book in full color. Takes me about 2 weeks and I included a coloring book--which is simply the JPEG files before the book is colored.
Hope that helps.
- Jaime

Thanks! That's the kind of information I was looking for.

-Seeing that Adult Coloring books are hot right now, how would someone go about marketing and reaching the audience?
-What would you price a coloring book at?
-If the illustrator is doing most of the work for drawings based off your work then how does payment and royalties work?

- it's entirely up to you who does the drawings. If you think your friends are good enough, use them!
- you market them same as other books, except you can run coloring contests on Facebook and stuff.
- coloring books go for $6-$10. (Make sure you have at least 30 drawings to color.)
-you have to work out payment and royalties before you publish. Sign a contract that makes it clear what profit sharing (or debt sharing) will look like. I signed a contract with Alex Bledsoe to split the proceeds 50/50, only because he has a big following and I felt that most (if not all) of the sales would be to his fans.


I just had a thought right this moment : I could draw my own colouring books, but if I was going to get them published and put on the market, I would do patterns. You can't go wrong with patterns

It brought me back to this idea though. The images I colored were intricate, complex and detailed. They were also mainly designs although I did color a leaf with several designs and parts.
I'm now wondering, is it better to create the hard designs or images with the designs in them?(For example, the leaf with intricate patterns or a diamond with tons of patterns) or does it really matter? I'm thinking of doing both and having some quotes from my poems part of the designs.
Finally, as I was coloring I noticed the complex one and it didn't look man-made but almost machine made though I guess if someone is skilled enough I guess they can really draw the hardest images.


http://www.thecreativepenn.com/2016/0...

It brought me back to th..."
Some artists use programs like Clip Studio Art and Photoshop to digitally draw their coloring pages! Or they hand draw the art, scan the image into the computer, and "clean up" the image.
I personnally drew my images by hand, but I may try a digital program next time. That would be a whole new skill to master, but it might be fun :)
As for how intricate to make the images, I think that's personal preference. Some colorists love little details and some find it too difficult.

My illustrator and I are doing a 50/50 split.

I really love the idea of adult coloring books.