How to make zines!

Looking for someone to introduce your peoples to zines? I’ve lectured, led workshops, and designed activities for several organizations and institutions, both online and in person. Most recently these include St. Johns, Virginia Tech, University of Louisville, Syracuse University, Rowan University, Transilvania University of BraΘ™ov (Romania), Onondaga County Libraries, South Jersey Children’s Book Festival, and more. Get in touch if you are interested in discussing ways we could make this happen: jwluther [at] gmail.

Where to order

Several indie shops & distros sell zines online. Here are a few I recommend, though you can also find a thorough and mostly up to date list here:

  • Quimby’s β€” Famous underground bookstore in Chicago that carries thousands of titles.
  • Antiquated Future β€” Distro out of Portland, OR.
  • Brown Recluse Zine Distro β€” Seattle distro that specializes in POC zines and radical politics.
  • Wasted Ink β€” Distro, shop, and primary host for the PHX Zine Fest focusing on marginalized voices.
  • Atomic Books β€” Another great underground bookstore specializing in weird stuff.
  • Printed Matter β€” Book art and edgy zines out of NYC.

Examples online

How to make

Books

Tutorials

There are many many more on the web, but these are some of the better ones I’ve encountered.

Tools, templates, and spaces

  • Electric Zine Maker β€” open source freeware for making your zine in a unbridled, wacky digital interface. thanks, alienmelon!
  • Seashore β€” free, powerful photo editor for Mac OSX
  • Glimpse β€” another free photo editor
  • Zines! A Primer mini-zine (pdf) by Syracuse In Print
  • Digital templates for mini-zines [docx] [pages] [indd]
  • More templates from Jenna Freedman & Barnard Zine Library [dropbox]
  • Heyzine β€” free and simple to use flipbook maker.
  • Shrimp Zine β€” simple, no frills digital zine making tool

Connecting with others

Aside from the obvious hashtags like #zines and #quaranzines on Twitter & Instagram, these are some spaces where you might find zinesters gathering.

  • Behind the Zines — Fascinating, bi-annual meta-zine by/for/about zinesters and wrangled by Billy McCall. Find print copies at Antiquated Future and free digital copies on billy’s site.
  • Broken Pencil β€” Longtime, but now defunct, Canadian magazine that specializes in North American zine culture. Published quarterly.
  • r/zines β€” Subreddit for zines
  • POC Zine Project β€” Important resource that advocates for nonwhite zines and Black Lives Matter through materiality.
  • Razorcake β€” Punk magazine that reviews like-minded music zines.

Short videos about zine culture

Zine studies

Archives

Histories

Teaching tools

  • Unit: “Making Zines.” A 3-assignment sequence I use in Self-publishing, where students experiment with zine-making using different creative approaches and materials.
  • Assignment: “Reflecting with Zines: A Multimodal Alternative to the Final Reflective Essay” A helpful chapter by Kelli R. Gill from the Rhetorical & Genre Awareness section of Writing Spaces.
  • Courses: “Using Zines in the Classroom.” A survey of ways I’ve used zines while teaching creative nonfiction and DIY Publishing at Syracuse University (HASTAC)
  • Lesson plan: “Zine Workshop” by Aisha Conner-Gaten (Community of Online Research Assignments)
  • Lesson plan & workshop: “Make a Quaranzine.” Accessible 1-hour workshop sponsored by The Believer magazine and hosted by longtime Runcible Spoon publisher, graphic memoirist, and NPR contributor, Malaka Gharib.
  • All the things. Barnard Zine Library. Several different lesson plans, videos, and other resources, with classes and workshops ordered from newest to oldest.
  • Zine kits. Many zines fests and public programs adapted to COVID-19 by mailing out zine-making kits in advance of an event or workshop. [Lancaster Zine Fest] [Austin Film School]