To celebrate the 5th and final anniversary of DazeCon, we're hosting a Kagerou Project Zine Fest!
Inspired by real life zine fests, we're now hosting a fun opportunity for fans to create their own zines. Zines will need to be submitted to this page by August 15th, 12 PM CST(13:00)! The completion of the zine jam will also be shared on DazeCon's server to help showcase our wonderful community!
The format of the zine is up to you; it can be digital or traditional, where you can either scan pages or take pictures of the content inside!
"Traditionally, a zine is an original, self-published booklet that usually follows a particular theme or topic, made by one person or a small group. These booklets usually consists of text and images that are physically cut and glued in the original copy, for photocopies to eventually be made. The copies are usually stapled and/or bound in any fashion, and often passed around or sold in small circles. Zines can also be shared online, either through scans or photos of the original booklet, or as a downloadable format if the zine is predominantly made with digital tools and programs. These are commonly known as e-zines.
Zine works usually vary between text, comics, photos, essays, collages, stories, fanfiction, illustration, doodles, poetry, and personal journals. With the expansive use of the internet, zines have also varied in terms of what can be featured in e-zines, such as music, games, audio pieces, and animation. Themes are practically limitless, ranging from politics, social theory, popular figures, hobbies, single-topic obsession, and so on.
A fanzine is a non-professional, non-official zine produced by enthusiasts of a particular cultural phenomenon to often share with those who share their interest, such as genres and pop culture." - Zinestuck
Here are some resources (provided by https://itch.io/jam/zine-jam-growth-edition) about making zines traditionally and digitally or a mix of both:
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