Choosing album artwork must be one of the most difficult parts of finalizing a record. Artists go into these decisions knowing the image will follow them throughout their careers—it will be turned into T-shirts, posters, backdrops and even tattoos.While many artists have used photography or typeface to create their album artwork, other bands have gone for a more surrealist approach. Here are the top 20 illustrated album covers.
Homesick by A Day To Remember

Homesick, with its eerie trees and lurking spiders, is probably ADTR’s most memorable album cover. The style might also seem familiar, since the man who designed it, Dan Mumford, has done album artwork for Miss May I, Parkway Drive and many other acclaimed metalcore artists.
Tracing Back Roots by We Came As Romans
Paul Romano has designed every album cover for We Came As Romans, but Tracing Back Roots is by far the most interesting. Continuing with their ever-present plant motif, the image of the man becoming a tree fits beautifully with the overall theme of the record.
Bone Palace Ballet by Chiodos
If the style from Tracing Back Roots looks familiar, it’s because any fan of Chiodos has seen Paul Romano’s work before. Trading in trees for skeletons, Romano brought to life some of Chiodos’ most iconic images.
Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge by My Chemical Romance
Inspired by the tragic story of the two lovers depicted throughout the tracks of this album, Gerard Way designed the album artwork for My Chem’s second full-length, which makes this creepy cover art even cooler.
In Love And Death by the Used
The hanging heart has become synonymous with the Used, but also shows that sometimes simplicity can go a very long way.
The Emptiness by Alesana
The Emptiness tells the story of an artist gone mad after the death of his beloved. Rather than use dark colors to depict their brooding artist, Alesana opted for sepia tones to illustrate their best-selling record.
The Art Of Drowning by AFI
Done in the same style as their All Hallow’s EP, The Art Of Drowning artwork by Alan Forbes brings whimsy to the macabre.
Dookie by Green Day
There is no album on this list more recognizable than Green Day’s 1994 punk masterpiece, Dookie. Its cohesive chaos allows for the viewer to find something new and bizarre almost every time they look at it.
Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness by the Smashing Pumpkins

This album has always looked like a strange recreation of a Renaissance painting done by aliens trying to understand art history. That, or a girl who got stuck in a star exhibit during a field trip to the Air and Space Museum. Nonetheless, it’s a pretty eye-catching image.
Demon Days by Gorillaz
The four-square image of the animated characters that make up Gorillaz comes to life on the cover of Demon Days. The album art pays a slight tribute to many iconic images of the Beatles with their covers for A Hard Day’s Night and Let It Be.





