Process

Experimenting with ink colors

I experimented with layering colors using Ranger Distress Oxide inks. I started with purple and then layered on blue and red orange.

Page cut into rectangles. Each piece has a mix of purple, blue, and red orange stamp inks

I used standard printer paper, which is why I think the cut pieces curled. Cardstock would have likely laid flat.

My original plan was to use these as backgrounds in a mini zine I’m making. That didn’t work out quite the way I wanted, so I’ll keep these for something else. Maybe a collage?

How to lay out a zine in Canva

When I worked on my zine, “Timers for Travelers,” I finished the writing first. I knew I wanted illustrations throughout the zine, some hand-drawn and some digital. I decided to lay out the zine in Canva so that I could combine text, digital elements, and hand-drawn elements.

I’m really happy with how the zine came out, so I want to document my process. This is less a tutorial of Canva and more a walk-through of how I used it to put together my zine.

Canva is a free tool for graphic design. Although there are paid tiers, everything in this post was done with the free version. You can use Canva directly in an internet browser and there are apps you can download, too. If you haven’t used Canva before, you’ll need to create a free account.

Create a new file in Canva

Click on the Create a new design button and then click on Custom size. Enter the dimensions for your zine pages. For example, a quarter page zine would be 4.25 inches wide x 5.5 inches high. This file becomes your working file.

Make your zine

Make the pages of your zine with whatever method works for you. You can write text directly in Canva. I find it easier to do all my writing first in a word processor (I use Google Docs) and then copy and paste text into Canva.

Canva has a lot of graphic elements and images you can use for free. All the photos available in Canva are stock images from Pexels and Pixabay, and they are royalty-free.

Since you can upload images into Canva, you can draw on paper and scan pages. Then upload your drawings into Canva, and add them to your working file.

Note: Add page numbers last! If you're making pages and don't know what order they're going to be in yet, don't number pages. Instead, add page numbers after you have pages arranged in the order you want for the finished zine.

Print your zine

I like leaving my working file as is, like a draft. So when it’s time to print my zine, I make a copy of the working file (File >> Make a copy). This becomes the print file.

Since the pages will be printed on 8.5 x 11-inch paper, cut, folded, and stapled, they need to be arranged in the correct order for printing.

To figure out the print order of the pages, I make a mock-up version of the zine with scrap paper. There are lots of ways to do this. Here’s how I figure out page order.

Go to the print file in Canva and rearrange the pages for printing. You can drag and drop pages or use the up and down arrows above each page to change where they are.

When I’m moving a lot of pages around, I like working in grid view. Click on the button in the bottom right of the screen that looks like a stack of papers with a number on it.

Screenshot of a zine layout in grid view in Canva

When you’re done arranging pages, download the print file as a PDF. Click on the Share button (top-right). Then click on Download. For “file type,” choose “PDF Print.”

Open the PDF file on your computer. Go to print settings. Find the option for pages per sheet, and change this to 4. This will print 4 of your zine pages on one 8.5 x 11 piece of paper. Make sure two-sided printing is selected.

Print your zine. Cut the pages in half horizontally and then fold them. If you ordered the pages correctly in Canva, then the pages should be in the correct order when you assemble them as a booklet.

How to figure out page order for printing zines

How do you arrange zine pages so they print in the correct order? There are lots of ways to do this, depending on the size of your zine and the number of pages. Here’s one method for quarter-page zines.

Shout-out to Ryan at Pocket Thoughts. His method for printing quarter-page zines is the first one I learned. What I have below is similar to the way he does it.

Here’s how I determine page order for printing zines

This example is with a quarter-page zine where the cover is blue cardstock and the interior pages are standard white copy paper.

A hand holding "Timers for travelers" zine. The zine cover is blue paper. The title is printed in black. A pattern of overlapping circles is behind the title.

Printing a quarter-page zine on 8.5 x 11-inch paper means that you have 4 zine pages on the front of the sheet of paper and 4 zine pages on the reverse side of the sheet. So that you don’t have (unintentional) blank pages, your total number of zine pages should be a multiple of 4.

I make a paper dummy (aka mock-up) to figure out the page order. The process might be difficult to follow in writing, so I made a video explaining my method. The rest of this post is the method written out.

To make the mock-up, I use scrap paper that’s the same size as what the actual zine will be printed on (8.5 x 11 sheets of paper). If you’re going to have a different paper for the cover, you can use a different color of scrap paper or just mark the paper somehow so you know that’s the cover.

Cut the 8.5 x 11-inch pages in half horizontally.

A blank sheet of white paper with a horizontal dotted line across the middle.

Then fold the half-sheets vertically and put them together as a booklet. You should have the same number of pages as what you want your finished zine to be. Zines with 16 pages are common, so that would be the covers plus 12 interior pages.

Don’t staple the pages since you’ll be taking them apart anyway.

Label the front cover, back cover, and interior pages.

A folded mock-up for a zine. The outside pages are green. The front says "front cover."

Take the pages apart, unfold them, and lay them out as if they were 8.5 x 11-inch sheets of paper. You’ll have groupings with 2 half-sheets. Then you can see how the zine pages should be ordered for printing. Flip the half-sheets over to see which zine pages would be on the reverse side of the page. This will show you how to arrange zine pages for double-sided printing.

Two half-sheets of white paper with page numbers written on them. The top sheet has 12 on the left and 1 on the right. The bottom sheet has 10 on the left and 3 on the right.

Depending on the number of pages in your zine or if you want to use a different type of paper for the cover, you may end up with a half-sheet on its own. In this case, for the print layout you can copy and paste the top half of the sheet to the bottom half. So on the 8.5 x 11-inch sheet of paper, the top half would be the same zine pages as the bottom half.

Take notes so you remember the page order. These can be rough since they’re just for reference when you’re arranging pages in layout.

I use “1A” and “1B” to indicate that’s one sheet of paper, front side (1A) and back side (1B). Then “2A” is the front of the second sheet of paper and “2B” is the back of the second sheet of paper.

A white sheet of paper with notes about how to arrange zine pages.

As long as you figured out the sequence correctly, you’ll be able to print and assemble your zines in the correct page order.

Let me know in the comments if you do something similar for figuring out the layout of your zines or if you use a completely different method.

Trying out Tumblr Blaze

Tumblr introduced Blaze in April 2022. It’s a way to sponsor one of your Tumblr posts so that it reaches more people. You pay a certain amount of money. Tumblr pushes your post to people’s dashboards until the post reaches a certain number of impressions.

When I released “Timers for travelers,” I figured I’d try blazing the post about it. I paid $10 for 2,500 impressions.

My post was approved. It traveled to a bunch of people’s dashboards for the next 24 hours. A confirmation email I got from Tumblr said that the cutoff was 24 hours. Not the number of impressions. So it’s possible my post would get more than 2,500 impressions.

After the 24-hour period, Tumblr sent me a report:

Tumblr Blaze report that shows engagement metrics

The post got 4,340 impressions (remember, I paid for 2,500) and 35 total engagements.

For comparison, my other zines I’ve posted to Tumblr get a handful of engagements. Sponsoring this post definitely led to more engagements than my posts normally get.

A couple things to note:

  1. Tumblr doesn’t let you choose a target audience. Your sponsored posts gets pushed to people’s dashboards…seemingly at random. It’s not clear if there’s an algorithm deciding. But you don’t get to choose based on user demographics or interests.
  2. You can’t schedule when your post gets sponsored (at least for now). So you blaze your post, the Tumblr team approves it, and then it gets pushed to people’s dashboards. If you wanted your post to be sponsored at a specific time, that would be difficult to get exact timing.

I think it’s amusing that you can’t pick a target audience or set up sponsored posts ahead of time. In a sense, Tumblr is poking fun at marketing tactics. But yeah, Tumblr Blaze doesn’t work the same way as sponsoring posts on other social media platforms.

Even so, I would totally Blaze another post. It’s a good way to support Tumblr. And considering it’s the only social media platform that doesn’t frustrate me, I’m more than happy to throw some money at it.

October log in my bullet journal

Another month, another log. Did anyone else feel like September flew by?

A journal page with a monthly log for October. The top of the page says, "October log." The log is outlined in Orange. Down the left side, days are listed (1-31) and abbreviations for days of the week. One column says "CO," for "creative output." The rest of the space is for notes. On the right side of the page, there's a strip of washi tape with a black background and small gold stars.

This is what I do for a monthly log in my bullet journal. One page as an overview. I use the CO (“Creative Output”) column to mark days I’m working on creative projects (zines, drawing, writing). You could use the column to track anything, and even add columns if you wanted more of a habit tracker.

I use the notes section to write down appointments, dates to remember (birthdays, anniversaries), or whatever else is going on that month. When I mark off the the CO column, then I’ll also log what I worked on in the notes section.

I switched to digital journaling in July, but I’m still doing these monthly logs in my bullet journal. I like seeing the whole month at a glance.

Close up of journal page with a monthly log for October
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