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Put your creative work out there part 2

A few years ago, I wrote a blog post about when a librarian asked to use one of my zines in a student workshop. The post was about sharing your work, because you never know who it will reach.

I have another story for you.

Someone on Etsy purchased a couple of my zines. Then they messaged me and said my zines inspired them to try making zines. They made a one-page mini zine, but they couldn’t get it to print and fold exactly right. So they asked if I could offer any tips or advice. 

I love sharing my process, so yes of course I’m happy to offer tips. I replied with details about the paper I use (24 lb). I told them how I print my zines (laser color printer at home and the Staples print center is great, too). I listed tips for folding, like taking your time to make precise folds. I use a bone folder to make crisp creases. I lay a heavy object on top of folded zines to help them flatten out.

They responded and said thank you for the advice and that they’re working on more zines! 

I see a few different stages of interacting with creative work, from low effort to high effort.

The first stage is keeping your reaction to yourself. You like the piece or you don’t like it, but you don’t tell anyone what you think.

The second stage is sharing your thoughts with other people. For example, leaving an Etsy review, telling your friends about it, or messaging the creator to let them know what you liked.

The third stage is being inspired to make your own work.

I don’t know how this person found me on Etsy or what other zines they’ve seen, but I’m amazed that they were inspired to make their own zines. And not just one zine, but several! 

It’s a big deal to go from buying some kind of art to then learning how to make that kind of art yourself. That’s effort and initiative when the easy thing is to consume media passively. 

Back to putting your creative work out there.

If I didn’t share my zines online, I wouldn’t have opportunities to connect with people who are interested in making zines.

If I only posted high-effort, slick zines, then maybe people wouldn’t feel comfortable jumping into zines after seeing one of mine.

If I didn’t share process photos and talked about how I make zines, maybe people wouldn’t message me with questions.

If I cared about how “good” my zines are or if people would like them, I would be less likely to share them online. And then I would miss out on connections with people.

Sharing your work really does make a difference. 

Your work doesn’t have to be popular. You don’t have to have a huge audience. You don’t need a lot of sales. If your work has a positive impact on one person, that’s phenomenal.

That’s success.

03Mar2024

In the works

I’m working on a mini zine about social media. I can’t decide if I want to hand-write the text or type it, so I’m trying both ways.

I like typing text in zines because then it’s definitely readable. It’s easy to edit.

I like the look of handwritten zines, but it’s more effort to keep the text legible and spaced correctly on the page.

So we’ll see.

26Feb2024

In the works

I spent almost 3 hours yesterday on Children of Immigrants, a contributor zine I’m putting together about immigrant experiences.

Submissions make up 26 pages of the zine. I need 28 pages (a multiple of 4) for printing, so I made 2 pages to finish out the zine.

I designed the covers, too. First I tried making a collage by hand and leaving room to add text in Canva. Well, I cut out bits of scrapbook paper and tried a few arrangements without gluing anything down. It looked really messy and blah. I didn’t like it. So I tried making the cover in Canva instead and that went much better.

Today I’m going to do a final proofread and final layout check, and then I can send the pages off for printing!

Zine: Shoveling sand – My favorite writing advice

“Shoveling sand” is a 20-page zine that collects my favorite writing advice from several writers. I grouped quotes by themes including “keep a notebook,” “don’t worry about being popular,” and “get the first draft down.”

A hand holding the zine "Shoveling sand: My favorite writing advice." The cover of the zine features a close-up photo of a typewriter. The title of the zine is positioned to look as if the typewriter typed the text.

This zine measures 5.25 inches high x 4 inches wide. The cover is printed in full color on white cardstock. The interior pages are printed in black and white on 24 lb. white paper. Designed and laid out in Canva.

18Feb2024

In the works

I’m working on the layout for “Children of immigrants” in Canva. Yesterday, I added everyone’s submissions and that took me to 26 pages! Printing requires a page count that is a multiple of 4 (unless you intentionally leave blank pages), so that means I have to make 2 pages to finish out the zine. I already was planning on one page, so I’ll see what I come up with for a second page. Maybe some kind of collage.

I have to do the cover design, too. I’ve been playing with a couple ideas but nothing settled yet.

06Feb2024

In the works

I’m working on a zine about my favorite writing advice. It’s a quarter-page zine, meaning four zine pages will fit on one sheet of paper.

The most complicated part of making quarter-page zines is the print layout.

If you make the zine pages in order, you have to reshuffle them so that they print in the correct sequence.

If you don’t want to reshuffle, then you have to make the pages out of order. That may or may not work for you.

It doesn’t work for me.

So what I’m doing is working in two Canva files. One is my “working file” and sized for the finished zine page size (4.25 inches x 5.5 inches). When I finalize the pages, I’m going to export them as images.

Then the second Canva file is my “print file” and sized at 8.5 inches x 11 inches. I added guides to divide the pages into quarters. I labeled the page numbers so that the zine will print in the correct sequence. Then I’ll add each zine page (as an image) to this print file.

It’s not necessarily a difficult process, but it does feel like extra steps and extra time. And I haven’t been able to simplify from here.

I should mention I did try downloading all the zine pages as a PDF and then printing 4 pages per sheet. This printing method leaves gaps between each page, so there’s extra white space around each page. What I’m doing in the print file in Canva doesn’t leave any gaps.

29Jan2024

In the works

I finished the submission for that local zine. I think it’ll come out in March, so I’ll post about it when it’s available.

I typed up the quotes I gathered for my zine on writing advice. The document is three and a half pages long, and that’s before I add commentary for each quote. So I may end up cutting some quotes.

The theme has been shifting a bit.

Originally, I wanted to focus on tips for writing online. I started gathering quotes and the content felt sparse. So I broadened to gathering tips for any kind of writing. Now the quotes are a mix of writing online, writing fiction, and writing in general. Maybe it feels like a mishmash. I’ll get a better feel for it when I start adding commentary.

23Jan2024

After I posted yesterday, I saw a link to The Underground Blog via Warren Ellis. It’s a blog that can be read only via RSS, with a feed reader. No posts on a website and nothing to link to. It feels, yeah, underground. It’s the nerdiest thing I’ve seen in blogging and I love it already.

I just realized these log posts might make good fodder for things I share in my monthly newsletter. Everything builds.

In the works

I did some research for that zine I volunteered for and sent the organizer a few ideas to get his feedback. Looks like I’ll be making a list of tips for making zines by hand. 🙂

I remembered one quote to add to my zine on writing advice:

“I’m writing a first draft and reminding myself that I’m simply shoveling sand into a box so that later I can build castles.”

– Shannon Hale

On my mind

When it comes to posting online, I go through phases of posting to a lot of places and then later consolidating to just a couple places. I think I’m in a phase of consolidating. Mostly I’m tired of keeping up with different sites and apps and what I posted where. I have a whole to do list for posts when I make a new zine and ooof, I get tired of it.

I’ll focus on posting here and posting on Instagram when I have images to share. (I’m also focusing on posting here as an antidote to doomscrolling on social media.) And my monthly newsletter is the consolidated, here’s what I’m up to and here are some things you might be interested in.

22Jan2024

The one where I risked breaking my blog.

But all is well. I’m still here.

Yesterday I wanted to title these log posts with the date. That reminded me how my blog URLs include the year and month (like, 2024/01). So yesterday when I made my log post, the end of the URL looked like 2024/01/21Jan2024.

Redundant.

I’ve been meaning to change my blog post structure so that it doesn’t include year and month in the URL. (Let my blog join the mid-2000s at last haha.) I was hesitating because I have posts on here going back to 2008 and who knows how many links I would break in the process?

Well, the answer is 36 links. And most of them were on a couple static pages and in blog posts from the last two years.

I fixed those broken links, and that wasn’t so bad. Now my blog posts will end with /blog/post-name. Cleaner and simpler. And these log posts with dates as titles won’t look ridiculous, haha.

In the works

I volunteered to contribute an article to a zine about local art, music, and history. I can’t write about music, so I’m going to research potential topics for art and history.

21Jan2024 The first log

I spent some time today wandering around other people’s blogs. It’s the kind of thing that fits especially on wintry Sunday afternoons.

One thing I’ve been skimming through is “status” posts on Warren Ellis’ website. He uses status posts to share updates on what he’s working on, what he’s reading or watching, and whatever else he wants to share about the day. Some posts are only one paragraph. Some are longer.

His way of sharing his work is in the same vein as two other writers whose work I admire: Robin Sloan (work with the garage door open) and Austin Kleon (show your work).

I’ve been doing the show your work part for a while, especially with sharing how I make zines. I love the idea of working with the garage door open but I haven’t done that a lot. Online, it means sharing what goes into your work and not just the finished piece. What I’ve been missing is the status part.

I’m going to adapt the idea of Ellis’ status posts and blend that with what I already do to share my creative work.

Here’s my plan:

This blog is about my creative projects and what I do for fun. Not my day job. So “status” doesn’t feel quite right for me. I’ll categorize my posts as “log” instead. As in, “captain’s log” for capturing important info.

I like how Ellis uses the date to title his status posts. That shows right away what kind of post it is. I’ll use dates in my titles, too.

My log posts will not be daily. I’ll see how once or twice a week feels.

So, let’s see:

In the works

I’ve been doing research for a new zine about my favorite writing advice. I’m collecting quotes right now from books on my shelf and a few quotes I have to google. My plan is to list all the quotes in a document and then write a few notes or comments about each one. After I see how much text that is, I can decide on zine format. So far, I’m leaning toward a quarter-page zine. Black and white on the inside pages with a color cover.

What I’ve been watching

Yesterday I watched Spy Game (2001). I like seeing a spy thriller that isn’t all car chases and fight scenes. A lot of the movie feels like watching Robert Redford play chess. You’ll see what I mean if you watch the movie. I’m not going to spoil anything.

I’ve been re-watching The Flash, and I’m about a third of the way through season 2. The first two seasons of the show were my favorite.

To dig into

ooh.directory – Warren Ellis (and maybe someone else I follow?) have linked to ooh.directory as a way to discover blogs. The site has been on my radar for a while, but I haven’t spent time browsing it yet.

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