The walls were full of LP jackets, 12-inch square album covers that either shouted or whispered their contents to the passer-by, and could easily be spotted from 50 paces.
Referring to the "first" samba-canção of this kind, Paulo Tapajós wrote in a LP jacket:
She described the album packaging as "a big box that resembles the LP jackets."
The tracks for the LP, as listed from the back of the LP jacket, are as follows:
Carefully packing it into an empty LP jacket, I carried it home and that weekend played it more than once in my apartment.
Several months later, the album was reissued in a standard LP jacket, sans book.
These boxes look smaller than LP jackets, which are generally a little over 12 inches square, and in two dimensions this is true.
He also designed LP jackets for independent recording companies - Miles Davis' Conception for instance.
The album included the following blurb on the back of the LP jacket.
The LP jacket had a cutout stand on the back so it could be stood up like a picture frame.