Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

How I created personalized Spotify playlist covers to spruce up my library

read original get Custom Spotify Playlist Cover Art → more articles
Why This Matters

This article highlights how personalized playlist cover art can enhance user experience and organization within Spotify, emphasizing the importance of customization for avid music listeners. It demonstrates practical ways to create unique visuals that reflect individual taste, making digital libraries more engaging and visually appealing for consumers and the tech industry alike.

Key Takeaways

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

I’ve been a Spotify user for over a decade and, while many of my favorite playlists are ones that I’ve followed or added from other users, I still have my own fair share of personal playlists. Spotify usually does a good job of assigning a temporary default playlist art with the first four album covers from the songs you add, but I don’t think that’s a clean look.

I’ve spent weeks organizing my Spotify library with different folders and sub-folders and a carefully curated system to sort and find the playlist I need, so having lazy generic covers was the last thing I wanted. Over the years, I’ve tried to find online graphics and icons to apply to my playlists, but I recently realized I could make much more personalized cover art with Gemini’s Nano Banana. Here’s how I’ve used it to spruce up my Spotify library.

Making variants of Discover Weekly and Release Radar For years now, I’ve had an IFTTT recipe that automatically copies any new song in my Discover Weekly and Release Radar playlists into an archive playlist. That way, if I ever miss an update to my Discover or Release playlists for a week or don’t have the time to check them, or maybe if I’m not in the mood to listen to music during that week, I can always go back and listen to what Spotify had in store for me. Plus, every year, I spend a bit of time going through the full archive to rediscover and enjoy the music I stumbled upon (or remove the songs I don’t like).

My “Discover Archive” and “Release Radar” playlists have had generic cover art all this time because I was too lazy to create something in Photoshop. But Gemini saved me a lot of time. I just dropped in the default Discover Weekly playlist cover and told it to upscale it, replace “Weekly” with “Archive” and switch the color scheme to yellow and orange instead of pink and purple. The result is perfect with the right font and effect.

I did the same thing with the Release Radar playlist, replacing “Radar” with “Archive” and switching to a blue and green color scheme. Again, I got a perfect playlist cover that is distinct enough from the original to not confuse it, but is still close to the original design to help me know what I’m looking at at a glance. You can see the results in the two images above.

Creating covers similar to previous ones

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority Screenshot

I have a series of genre-based playlists that cover the gamut from Chill to Country, House Party, Latin, Rock, and so on. A long time ago, I found a distinct free set of icons that I used for them. I didn’t think I’d need that icon pack again, but I recently made an Arabic playlist, separate from my existing Oriental playlist, and I needed something more specific for it. I gave Gemini a few of the existing icons and asked it to generate one in the same style for an Arabic playlist, while keeping the transparent background.

It fulfilled most of the promise, going for an oud as the instrument, using the vertical separation down the middle, and adding the strong diagonal shadow. It’s not a perfect match, as the colors aren’t as vibrant, but I think it works for the purpose of a more Arabic, desert sand-like feel. However, instead of the transparency I asked for, the PNG file it generated had the checkered background built in. I had to use Photoshop to clean it up properly. Still, it’s better than I would’ve done myself, and much faster.

... continue reading