2-Tone Checkerboard Sleeve (Jerry Dammers / Coventry 1979 Register)
Source-image rendered as a 1979-1981 2-Tone Records sleeve: black-and-white only, checkerboard borders, Walt Jabsco rude-boy silhouette sensibility, Coventry post-industrial graphic discipline.

The prompt
Render the source image in the visual register of a 1979-1981 2-Tone Records sleeve (The Specials, Madness, The Selecter, The Beat) designed by Jerry Dammers and house illustrators. Palette restricted to pure black and pure white with one optional grey midtone, no other colors permitted. Heavy checkerboard pattern as a compositional element: border band along one or more edges, or as a ground plane the subject stands on. Subject treated with high-contrast graphic reduction reminiscent of the Walt Jabsco rude-boy silhouette: porkpie-hat-and-suit visual logic, sharp edges, no halftone middle ground. Background flat white or flat black. Square 12-inch LP-jacket framing where source aspect allows. Mood: tight, disciplined, urban-British, racially integrationist, mod-influenced, slightly menacing in its precision. No legible text, no band name, no logos, no catalog marks. Preserve the subject, pose, and composition of the source image exactly, change only the medium and rendering.
What it is doing
The 2-Tone checkerboard was not graphic design, it was a one-frame summary of an entire political program: black and white together, equal squares, alternating, no hierarchy, no fade between them. Jerry Dammers built a record label around the proposition that the racial integration of Coventry's youth scene could be made into both music and image without compromise. Borrowing this register today is borrowing the most graphically compressed political claim in pop music history. The risk is borrowing the checker without the claim.
Tuning knobs
- Checker scale: fine (subtle border) to coarse (dominant ground plane)
- Checker location: single edge border to full ground plane to wrapping field
- Subject contrast reduction: moderate (some halftone) to extreme (pure black-white only)
- Optional grey: none (pure two-tone) to subtle midtone use
- Composition: Walt Jabsco frontal silhouette to looser source-respecting
Style lineage
Learn the visual culture this draws from: Britannica.
Related prompts
See all 28 prompts in the Album-Cover grammar · Open in the gallery