on sliding scale zine pricing, and the economics of running a tiny press - sheer spite press
Pricing creative work is notoriously difficult. I find it especially so for zines. In running Sheer Spite, two things that are important to me are supporting people in making...
Hermetic Library Zine Archives - The Hermetic Library Blog
Current and past issues of Hermetic Library Zine are collected here, along with other Zine related posts. Read more about the Hermetic Library Zine, and if you’ve got something, send it as a submission.
Meet the Galway zine club offering an alternative to social media | Irish Independent
In a pub in the West end area of Galway, a plethora of people huddle together over drinks with magazine cuttings. Glitter and glue is strewn across the table in an effort to create – in a move away from technology and towards a more analogous avenue of creative expression – zines.
FatBoy Zine is a personal cookbook and cultural diary in the shape of a mini magazine
“It used to be all of me, it was directed entirely by my thoughts, taste, and words. But since inviting more people in, it’s become shared. Now it’s like an end of school notebook you get everyone to sign.”
Why I Founded a Print Magazine At the Peak of Digital Media Mania
Here in New Orleans, if you want to go out and buy a print magazine, good luck. Newsstands are essentially a thing of the past, and few bookstores still stock…
how to build a ____.Madeleine Aguilar2023bench press Issues:1. Madeleine Aguilar2. Ray Madrigal3. Jane Ferry4. Bex Ya Yolk 24 pages7 × 8 in. closedSaddle stitchRisograph printingEditions of 250 Mad…
Italian printmaker and pop member, Enea Seregni, began his journey into the world of printmaking back in 2017.What started as a dive into linocut technique quickly turned into a personal and artistic research, particularly inspired by his deep love for cult horror, fantasy, and science fiction movies.From the very beginning,…
The Pit is a cartoon-filled newspaper about swamps, mommies and ice fishing
After becoming disillusioned with the mainstream publishing landscape, Jules Sharpe set themself on creating a free newspaper that was illustrated, optimistic, eccentric and full of heart.