Difference between revisions of "ZiP"

From ZineWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''ZiP: Zine in Progress''' is a ''polymegazine'' inspired by Noisebridge hackerspace in San Francisco's Mission District.  
+
'''ZiP: Zine in Progress''' is a ''polymegazine'' inspired by Noisebridge hackerspace in San Francisco's Mission District, in California, U.S.A.  
  
ZiP was conceived by veteran zinester [[Tony_Longshanks_LeTigre]] and his wizardly doppelganger, the [[Whimsical Wizard of ZiP]] (aka Whimzy) in late 2011, and launched its first issue on Valentine's Day, 2012. ZiP and related projects have a website currently in development and already fairly easy on the eyes called '''ZiPZineWeb]''' (ZZW).
+
''ZiP'' was conceived by veteran zinester [[Tony_Longshanks_LeTigre]] and his wizardly doppelganger, the [[Whimsical Wizard of ZiP]] (aka Whimzy) in late 2011, and launched its first issue on Valentine's Day, 2012. ZiP and related projects have a website currently in development and already fairly easy on the eyes called '''ZiPZineWeb]''' (ZZW).
  
 
By "polymegazine" we mean that it is a collaborative zine with a variety of contributors, and in addition to that it is a fairly large-scale and high-end zine. ZiP01, released Feb. 2012, was 60 pages long, with a digitally designed layout, printed with color covers.  
 
By "polymegazine" we mean that it is a collaborative zine with a variety of contributors, and in addition to that it is a fairly large-scale and high-end zine. ZiP01, released Feb. 2012, was 60 pages long, with a digitally designed layout, printed with color covers.  
  
ZiP is unusual in a number of respects. For one, its pagination is in Hexadecimal or Base 16 rather than the conventional decimal system. Each quarterly installment is called a Chapter rather than an Issue or Volume, the idea being that ZiP is in fact one '''megazinebook''' published as a serial. In keeping with this concept, the numbering of pages will continue from one chapter to the next, rather than starting over at 1 with each new publication.
+
''ZiP'' is unusual in a number of respects. For one, its pagination is in Hexadecimal or Base 16 rather than the conventional decimal system. Each quarterly installment is called a Chapter rather than an Issue or Volume, the idea being that ZiP is in fact one "megazinebook" published as a serial. In keeping with this concept, the numbering of pages will continue from one chapter to the next, rather than starting over at 1 with each new publication.
  
Each ZiP chapter has its own unique title, treated as a subtitle of ZiP. ZiP has its own zine classification system, which we can illustrate with the full '''ZIDN''' (Zine Identification Number) for ZiP Chapter 1:
+
Each ''ZiP'' chapter has its own unique title, treated as a subtitle of ''Zi''P. ''ZiP'' has its own zine classification system, which we can illustrate with the full '''ZIDN''' (Zine Identification Number) for ZiP Chapter "
 
+
"ZiP01.2°2012Q1.7DC'''
'''ZiP01.2°2012Q1.7DC'''
 
  
 
This can be broken down as "ZiP Chapter 1, Folio Print, 1st Quarter (Jan-March) 2012, Chapter Title: 7DC (which, incidentally, is Hexadecimal for "2012")
 
This can be broken down as "ZiP Chapter 1, Folio Print, 1st Quarter (Jan-March) 2012, Chapter Title: 7DC (which, incidentally, is Hexadecimal for "2012")
Line 17: Line 16:
  
 
[[Category:Zine]]
 
[[Category:Zine]]
[[Category:Webzine]]
+
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
 +
[[Category:California Zines]]
 +
[[Category:2010s publications]]

Revision as of 12:54, 8 February 2012

ZiP: Zine in Progress is a polymegazine inspired by Noisebridge hackerspace in San Francisco's Mission District, in California, U.S.A.

ZiP was conceived by veteran zinester Tony_Longshanks_LeTigre and his wizardly doppelganger, the Whimsical Wizard of ZiP (aka Whimzy) in late 2011, and launched its first issue on Valentine's Day, 2012. ZiP and related projects have a website currently in development and already fairly easy on the eyes called ZiPZineWeb] (ZZW).

By "polymegazine" we mean that it is a collaborative zine with a variety of contributors, and in addition to that it is a fairly large-scale and high-end zine. ZiP01, released Feb. 2012, was 60 pages long, with a digitally designed layout, printed with color covers.

ZiP is unusual in a number of respects. For one, its pagination is in Hexadecimal or Base 16 rather than the conventional decimal system. Each quarterly installment is called a Chapter rather than an Issue or Volume, the idea being that ZiP is in fact one "megazinebook" published as a serial. In keeping with this concept, the numbering of pages will continue from one chapter to the next, rather than starting over at 1 with each new publication.

Each ZiP chapter has its own unique title, treated as a subtitle of ZiP. ZiP has its own zine classification system, which we can illustrate with the full ZIDN (Zine Identification Number) for ZiP Chapter " "ZiP01.2°2012Q1.7DC

This can be broken down as "ZiP Chapter 1, Folio Print, 1st Quarter (Jan-March) 2012, Chapter Title: 7DC (which, incidentally, is Hexadecimal for "2012")

External Link