Oliver Miller Renders Book Sleeves Using Pixel Art Style 856989

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Versio hetkellä 16. tammikuuta 2013 kello 18.53 – tehnyt RenatoiwdmkehnrpjzejjdcarwyehymkamzqvabzpStudmire (keskustelu | muokkaukset) (Ak: Uusi sivu: This old stone farmhouse nestled among the trees in South Park is a sturdy remnant of frontier days. On this site [http://www.goldfuture.biz Oliver Miller] first built a log home i...)
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This old stone farmhouse nestled among the trees in South Park is a sturdy remnant of frontier days. On this site Oliver Miller first built a log home in the wilderness. Families gathered here to worship before there was a church or a minister. Sons of Oliver Miller served in the frontier militia and the Revolutionary War and were later involved in the Whiskey Rebellion.

The tale of this household reveals a way of daily life and a battle for survival widespread to people who very first settled Western Pennsylvania. Most of these frontier farmers ended up Scots-Irish immigrants some ended up of Scottish, Welsh, or German descent. They were proud Oliver Miller, frugal people with few possessions, determined to find good, cheap land and a better life.

The cover art for literary classics often reflects the prestige of each novel’s contents, but Oliver Miller wasn’t going to let conventions get in the way of innovation. Seen here are his takes on cover art for Frankenstein, Gravity’s Rainbow, Moby Dick, Catch-22, Tender is the Night, The Two Towers, Lolita and more, all rendered in an 8-bit game graphics style. The minimalistic visuals downplay each book’s reputation, but that shouldn’t stop you from reading any of these masterpieces in the first place.

Oliver Miller has been crafting pixel artwork handles for novels for fairly some time. He at the moment has eighteen in full, with authors ranging from Franz Kafka to Theodore Dreiser. Miller admits he has not examine or concluded some of them, but felt he could properly articulate the standard plot of every single ebook employing basic blocky graphics.