March 2021

Zine: 200 Years of Greek Independence

March 25, 2021, marks 200 years of Greek independence, and I made a zine to celebrate!

I’m sharing this zine under a Creative Commons license (CC BY-NC 4.0), so anyone can download it for free (and you can share it for non-commercial purposes).

Printing and folding instructions

1. Open the PDF and click Print.

2. Check the printer settings. Depending on your printer, you might need to make adjustments. These are the settings I used:

  • Paper size: Letter (8.5 x 11 inches)
  • Print on both sides; flip on long edge
  • Scale: Fit to paper

And then print the zine. It should look like this:

3. Fold the paper in half horizontally.

4. Unfold the paper, and cut along the crease.

5. Fold each piece in half vertically. After you’re done folding, the top pages should be the cover (200 Years of Greek Independence) and the first inner page (map of the Ottoman Empire).

6. Slide the inner pages into the cover pages. You can staple along the crease if you want.

And that’s it! I hope you enjoy this zine.

Oh, also! I don’t track downloads or page views on my site, because it’s none of my business what you do online. I won’t have any idea how many people saw this post or downloaded the zine, unless you tell me.

If you have thoughts or feedback, I would love to hear them! You can leave a comment below or send me a message.

Put your creative work out there

About a year ago, I stated making zines. It was something fun to share with friends, but then the pandemic hit, and we all stayed home. I couldn’t share my zines in person, so I started posting them to Instagram. I had no expectations for how people would respond. People seemed to like them, so every time I made a new zine, I posted it.

I attended a couple online workshops and (virtually) met people who make zines. That created a small community for me, which has been great during a year of limited social interaction.

I post my zines on Instagram and my blog, so anyone can read them digitally. But if anyone wanted a physical copy, there wasn’t an easy way to get one. Last August, I started an Etsy shop. Again, I had no expectations.

This week, I got a message about this zine:

A librarian who purchased my text message zine asked if she can use it as an example in a student workshop. I said yes because 1) it’s an opportunity to support education and 2) that’s super cool! A year ago, I would have never thought something I made would be in a workshop for students across the country. 

It started with me making zines for friends.

Then I posted zines to Instagram. 

Then I found more people who make zines. 

And then someone who saw my zines reached out to me. 

All of this to say—
If you’re working on something—writing, art, poetry, film—and you aren’t sure how it’s going to go…share it anyway. You don’t know if people will like it until they see it. You can’t guess what connections you’ll make through your work. 

Put your creative work out there, and see where it goes. It might lead you somewhere surprisingly good. 


This was originally posted to HEY World, a blogging platform from the wonderful people who made HEY email and Basecamp.

I’m not going to cross-post between there and here on a regular basis, so if you’re interested in following what I’m writing on HEY World, you can go to my page and subscribe for email updates. There’s also a link to the RSS feed (which I love!!), if you prefer to follow blogs that way.

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