Stay with Book Brush for marketing breadth
Book Brush's official pages describe a large cover-template library, extensive Instant Mockups, box sets, trailers on higher plans, stock media, background removal, and author-specific formats. If those campaign assets are already central to your workflow, replacing the suite with a narrower cover editor would add friction rather than remove it.
Its public print-cover walkthrough also documents a real book workflow: trim, paper, and page count feed a wrap with bleed, safe areas, spine, back cover, and barcode placeholder. Verify current printer and trim coverage in the product because the walkthrough itself is older.
Choose Coverfairy for one synchronized cover document
Coverfairy's distinction is not a larger stock library. Artwork, title, subtitle, author, overlay, shadow, back-cover copy, print setup, and export entitlement stay attached to one project. A genre template can be opened with live type, the artwork can be replaced without flattening the text, and the same hierarchy is used for front, full wrap, and thumbnail.
Generated and uploaded artwork versions are stored privately; production downloads are server-authorized and project-scoped. That makes the workflow more deliberate, but authors seeking hundreds of promotional scene choices may still prefer Book Brush.
Compare the full annual workflow
Book Brush currently displays Plus at $149/year, a promotional Gold price of $149/year, and Platinum at $246/year for a single author. Coverfairy charges per cover export entitlement instead of annually. A prolific author who uses mockups, trailers, and box sets may find the suite economics stronger; an author who wants one or two synchronized production covers may prefer project pricing.
Check renewal terms, refund windows, image rights, font uploads, source-file expectations, and what happens to created assets after cancellation. Pricing and terms are volatile, so use the reviewed date as a prompt to recheck both products before purchase.