What this is
A cover-art study for a Foundations-style content series. It explores how a guide, note, or resource can feel intentional before someone reads the first paragraph.
What it demonstrates
Content needs packaging. A strong cover system gives related pieces a shared identity, helps users recognize a series, and makes practical material feel worth keeping.
Design notes
The direction leans on a large serif gesture, quiet supporting lines, and plenty of negative space. It is designed to feel calm, reusable, and recognizable.
How it connects to product work
Product teams ship documentation, onboarding, launch notes, and internal guides. Treating those surfaces with design care improves adoption and makes systems easier to trust.
Shows content design judgment: practical artifacts need packaging, hierarchy, and trust signals just like product screens.
A checklist for making a series of guides feel coherent through title treatment, metadata, rhythm, and reusable art direction.
Apply the cover system across the journal and resource pages with generated social cards for each artifact.