Art in Isolation

10 lessons

Gettin’ Ziney

You have your photos, you have your concept, you have your sequencing. Now it's time to make your zine. The beauty of zines is that, by nature they can be anything and everything; kinda scruffy, cheap to make, easy to reproduce, one-offs, really really big or super tiny. 

Lesson menu

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Equipment

  • InDesign (if needed) or Publisher if you don't have Creative Cloud
  • Paper
  • Printer
  • Scissors/Stanley knife
  • Cutting board
  • Ruler
  • Glue 
  • Any special paper or materials you wish to use in your zine

Instructions

  1. 1

    Make your zine. I am leaving this as vague as possible because everyone will be doing this differently. And there is NO right or wrong way to make a zine

  2. 2

    Check out the resource links to YouTube videos to get an idea of how people make zines

Guiding Questions

Think about this question as you work your way through the lesson:

  • What could the title of your zine be?
  1. Making zine

    I made my zine by folding lots of pieces of paper and sticking photographs in

Lesson Content

  1. A zine is a self-published publication, traditionally made using a photocopier. The best thing about making zines is there is no right or wrong approach. You can use flimsy printer paper, newspaper, or fancy paper. You can print your images directly onto your paper or you can print them and stick them in. You can paint/draw/write directly into your zine. You can bind it with staples, glue, tape, or thread. You can print 100 of them or make only one. Yes, at the moment (because of lockdown) we don't have access to commercial printers, which makes bulk zine-making really easy. BUT in many ways, this can be a good thing. Think of it as a challenge to make your output as wildly customised as you want.

    Zines are such a cool and crazy output for projects like this because you can really do whatever you want with still having the satisfaction of having something tangible to hold at the end of the project. 

    When I usually make zines I use Adobe InDesign to layout my images neatly so I am able to see what it will look like in booklet format. HOWEVER, for this project I decided to get a lil wild and less structured with my zine making. I urge you to do the same. 

    Lesson Content

    Zine cover pages

  1. My zine

    Final zine: 'around and bout', a lil messy but still cute!

Tips & tricks



  • When needing to fold straight lines: Use the back of a butter knife and a ruler, line up with the ruler and softly run the back of the knife along the line that you want to fold. Do this quickly around two times back and forth to create a fold. Make sure to not press too hard, you may cut the paper in half
  • If you don't have a printer for this stage - it's still ok! You could try drawing your chosen images into a zine. Or make a digital zine! These are cool because you can still flip through them like a book
  • Click 'start slideshow' below to view people's Neighbourhood Watch Projects!

Start slideshow

Next lesson

6

Video Editing with Paper: Lesson 1