Fujita joined a prominent Philadelphia ad agency—
N.W. Ayer & Son—after completing his studies. He worked for Ayer for three years and during his tenure was awarded an
Art Directors Club gold medal for his Container Company of America ad. He employed an avant-garde style and was noticed by
William Golden at
Columbia Records. Columbia hired him in 1954 to lead the design department, building on the work of
Alex Steinweiss who established the practice of custom cover art. Fujita was the first to commission painters, photographers and illustrators to create cover art for Columbia's albums. Columbia felt a particular need to keep up with the cover art of
Blue Note Records. While at Columbia, Fujita designed close to 50 album covers, including numerous iconic jazz covers from the period for Dave Brubeck,
Miles Davis, the Jazz Messengers, and Charles Mingus, among others. Fujita used his own colorful abstract paintings for the covers of Brubeck's
Time Out, Gigi Gryce's
Modern Jazz Perspective, and
Mingus Ah Um. In 1957, Fujita left Columbia in order to broaden his portfolio. He rejoined the company a year later but left for good in 1960 to start his own firm. In 1963, he joined the public relations firm
Ruder & Finn, creating a design division called Ruder, Finn & Fujita (later Fujita Design) where he embarked on a long career of book cover design. He designed the covers for
In Cold Blood,
The Godfather, and
Pigeon Feathers. He taught design at the
Philadelphia Museum College of Art, the
Pratt Institute, and
Parsons School of Design. Near the time of retirement in the late 1980s, he served on the Board of Designers of the Go For Broke Monument near the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. ==Death==