Most of the time, bookplates are pasted inside books to identify who they belong to -- particularly useful if you're in the habit of loaning out your books to friends and would like to get them back. Usually you can buy them in bookstores, and they can be plain or decorative according to your taste.
But a secondary use is when someone would like a writer to sign their book and there is little or no chance of their ever being in the same place at the same time. Sometimes a reader will send one of their own bookplates for the author to sign; sometimes they'll just ask if the writer has any bookplates to send out. Obviously, it's cheaper (and less risky) mailing little pieces of paper back and forth, rather than the books themselves (thereby inviting the post office to lose them). Once it's pasted in, you've suddenly got a signed book.
Until now, when someone asked for a bookplate I sent something generic from the bookstore, but I recently decided to print up my own -- perhaps not as pretty as the kind you buy, but as Mark says, it seems more personal. (Also, weirdly and obsessively, I decided I wanted mine to color coordinate with the cover art.)
Mark, I used the same drawing program that I used for the maps, along with some decorative fonts I downloaded, and then a lot of cutting and pasting and tinkering with colors. Whether they turned out to be worth the effort you can decide when you receive yours.
But a secondary use is when someone would like a writer to sign their book and there is little or no chance of their ever being in the same place at the same time. Sometimes a reader will send one of their own bookplates for the author to sign; sometimes they'll just ask if the writer has any bookplates to send out. Obviously, it's cheaper (and less risky) mailing little pieces of paper back and forth, rather than the books themselves (thereby inviting the post office to lose them). Once it's pasted in, you've suddenly got a signed book.
Until now, when someone asked for a bookplate I sent something generic from the bookstore, but I recently decided to print up my own -- perhaps not as pretty as the kind you buy, but as Mark says, it seems more personal. (Also, weirdly and obsessively, I decided I wanted mine to color coordinate with the cover art.)
Mark, I used the same drawing program that I used for the maps, along with some decorative fonts I downloaded, and then a lot of cutting and pasting and tinkering with colors. Whether they turned out to be worth the effort you can decide when you receive yours.